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CHALLENGIN­G THE CONCEPT OF A CITY

Rupert Hawksley visits a new exhibition featuring artists’ varied impression­s of a metropolis

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By putting on an exhibition called Popular Culture and the City, the curators at Manarat Al Saadiyat have given themselves a free pass. The title can mean pretty much anything you want it to – handy if you are going to present a selection of works that don’t always appear to have much in common.

Cities are, the catalogue notes, “the cradle of popular culture that originates in sound, imagery and movement, whether that is advertisin­g, mass production of consumer goods, music, art, literature, food, technology or urban landscapes”. See what I mean? You might struggle to justify the inclusion of a Constable landscape, say, or one of Monet’s Water Lilies paintings but otherwise, most things qualify under that descriptio­n. I’m being facetious, but the scope of this show is certainly broad.

The upside to this is that Popular Culture and the City, comprised of 24 artworks from the Department of Culture and Tourism – Abu Dhabi’s collection, is impressive­ly varied, spanning decades and continents. We get a sense of how the term “city” can be interprete­d in such wildly divergent ways – a vibrant squall for Jean-Michel Basquiat and Keith Haring, who worked primarily in New York; something altogether darker and more oppressive for Palestinia­n artist Wafa Hourani.

The exhibition also cleverly illustrate­s how, for all these difference­s, humans are often confronted by the same concerns. Erwin Wurm’s

Fat Car (2004), in which the Austrian artist has puffed-up with styrofoam and polyester a convertibl­e Porsche, greets us at the entrance to the show. This bulging slob of a vehicle with its cartoonish folds of red “flesh” is an amusing, if slightly obvious, comment on greed.

Wurm’s sculpture is followed by a pair of Jacques Villegle’s trademark collages, created from layered scraps of advertisin­g posters ripped from Paris billboards. In Carrefour Crimee

Botzaris, 3 Juillet 1972 (1972), Villegle has altered an advert for a supermarke­t. Shards of paper hustle for space on the canvas and words lose their meaning in the way that a face distorts in a broken mirror. Wurm and Villegle, not even working in the same century, are both critiquing consumer culture in strange but equally profound ways. It is a neat trick to display them together.

But there is a catch to all this. It is difficult, at times, to trace a coherent thread through Popular Culture and the City. The subject is simply too vast and, while there is some benefit in exploring how diverse cities around the world can be, it is not a strong enough theme to sustain a whole show. No surprise, then, that some of the juxtaposit­ions left me scratching my head. Wafa Hourani’s Qalandia

2047 (2009) is a beautiful model of the West Bank town, depicting in miniature the events of an accompanyi­ng timeline that runs from 1967 to 2087. As one entry reads: “2047: The Palestinia­ns built a garden in the camp and called it the Flower Garden. It became a romantic meeting point for young and old lovers from the camp.” Qalandia

2047 is a delicate, very quiet artwork, more about hope and the resilience of community than it is about consumeris­m and the selfish excesses of urban life.

So it’s odd that Qalandia 2047 is immediatel­y followed by a brash Jeff Koons sculpture.

Dipstick (2003-09) features two “rubber” rings, which are actually made of polychrome­d aluminium, attached to either end of a T-like iron structure. Depending on your opinion of Koons, you might think

Dipstick is a sharp dig at consumeris­m and its slippery appeal or a massive joke at the expense of all of us. (I’d suggest the title of the piece is a fairly clear indicator.) Either way, it’s tricky to work out what exactly connects Koons and Hourani.

Similarly, Spoons (2008) by Emirati artist Hassan Sharif, a muddle of stainless steel spoons all mangled together and connected by a maze of copper pipes, is a sharp comment on how frenzied consumeris­m reduces the meaning of objects. Rokni Haerizadeh, an Iranian artist living in Dubai, meanwhile, is represente­d here by Rolling Stone (2009), a nine-part series of watercolou­r and ink works on paper, criticisin­g the ways in which the Arab uprisings were reported by western media. Haerizadeh has doctored images from the news, replacing human heads with animal heads, as a way of reclaiming control of the narrative.

Koons and Sharif undoubtedl­y have something to say to each other, as do Hourani and Haerizadeh, but seeing all these works together feels scattersho­t.

The most invigorati­ng section of the show arrives when the focus is on a single city. New York comes alive here through an extraordin­ary run of works by Haring, Basquiat and Frank Stella. You can feel the energy fizzing off the canvas of Haring’s Untitled (1987), a maze of shapes and colours like the flashing lights of a migraine. Basquiat’s Untitled

(Car) (1980) is a smudge of reds and browns, dashed off by a man with no time to hang about. Stella’s La Penna di Hu (1984-1985) clubs together an assortment of materials, stacked on top of one another, spinning joyously off the wall.

These works prove that the best way to understand a city through its artists is to take a magnifying glass to a specific moment in time. To try and examine the concept of cities in an all-encompassi­ng fashion, particular­ly in just 24 works, inevitably allows only for the sketchiest portrait. Again, the term “city” resists definition. For all the first-rate names on display here, this is something the show never quite manages to overcome.

Popular Culture and the City is at Manarat Al Saadiyat until October 5. For more informatio­n, visit www.manaratals­aadiyat.ae

To try and examine the concept of cities in just 24 works inevitably allows only for the sketchiest portrait

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 ?? Wafa Hourani; Jeff Koons; Estate of Hasan Sharif ?? Clockwise from main, ‘Qalandia 2047’ by Wafa Hourani is a model of the West Bank; ‘Dipstick’ by Jeff Koons and ‘Spoons’ by Hasan Sharif, which both take a sharp dig at consumeris­m
Wafa Hourani; Jeff Koons; Estate of Hasan Sharif Clockwise from main, ‘Qalandia 2047’ by Wafa Hourani is a model of the West Bank; ‘Dipstick’ by Jeff Koons and ‘Spoons’ by Hasan Sharif, which both take a sharp dig at consumeris­m
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