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SAUDI EXHIBITION CAPTURES NUANCES OF GULF IDENTITY

▶ Show by Misk Art Institute in Riyadh presents 17 artists from across the region, writes Melissa Gronlund

- Imprint is on show at the Prince Faisal bin Fahd Fine Arts Hall in Riyadh until January 28 and online at www.miskartins­titute.org

“Gulf individual­s want to be seen for who they are,” says Bahraini curator Latifa Abdulrahma­n Al Khalifa. “They don’t want to be categorise­d under rigid, archaic views of religion, oil or politics; after all, that’s not how one sees people from other parts of the world.”

With her show Imprint: Re-Imagining Identity for the Misk Art Institute in Riyadh, Al Khalifa has collected work in film and video by 17 artists from the Gulf, who address khaleeji identity. The issue has been foremost in cultural work, particular­ly in Saudi Arabia recently, as artists navigate a shift from the country’s restrictiv­e social policies to its embracing of creativity.

The picture they offer is deliberate­ly heterogene­ous. Saudi artists use the past to reflect on the present, drawing on different tribal or historical practices to show the country’s contempora­ry diversity.

For Thad (2018-2020), Moath Alofi shot drone imagery of geoglyphs – drawings carved into the earth – near his home town of Madinah, which were made 2,000 years ago by the Thamud tribe. The geometric forms and, in an accompanyi­ng video, sandstone-coloured dwellings show evidence of ancient civilisati­ons whose stories were left out of official Saudi history until recently.

In Al Fulle ( 2019), Reem Al Nasser documents the jasmine flowers that brides weave into their hair in the southern province of Asir, capturing the women in the midst of a traditiona­l dance in blurred, lowexposur­e photograph­s. The obfuscatio­n of the women’s faces here is key, and many artists use technologi­es to quietly signal what is allowed and not allowed to be seen – and how this too is changing. Maha Malluh’s photo series Tradition and Modernity (2008) juxtaposes different items from her house, putting her mobile phone on a par with a dalla, or traditiona­l coffee pot, as emblematic of Saudi life. In its subject matter, it acknowledg­es the developmen­t of Saudi Arabia, while its technique evokes an atmosphere of surveillan­ce, with the photogramm­ed items pictured as if they are in an X-ray machine at an airport.

Like Malluh’s exploratio­n of everyday Saudi life, vernacular practices are also foreground­ed elsewhere. Looking to the wisdom of the many, Ajlan Gharem’s sprawling, multi-photo installati­on Mount of Mercy (2012) shows images of the votive goods left on Mount Ararat by pilgrims during Hajj.

If some of the images look outward to emblems of Gulf life, others look inward, in an introspect­ive, emotive tone. A beautiful, if slightly retro series of surrealist­ic self-portraits by the Kuwaiti artist Maha Alasaker – Self Still Life, (2019) – plays with the symbolism of

gestures, foods and fragmentat­ion, as she obscures and reveals her face behind lace veils, collages and scattered sand.

The Key is to Meat in the Middle (2017) by Bahraini artist Mai Almoataz, shows a series of outstretch­ed hands, dangling across three frames in a gesture of openness that carries shades of violence.

“Someone is trying to connect with people and is not able to. There still exists a stigma against mental health around the world. Mai suggests that you have to compromise, break yourself down even, to connect with others,” says Al Khalifa.

Imprint is on show at the Prince Faisal bin Fahd Fine Arts Hall, an exhibition space

dating back to 1985, which Misk recently refurbishe­d and reopened to the Riyadh art scene. Because of the coronaviru­s pandemic, the exhibition is also in digital form, in a 3D viewing room on Misk’s website that has been visited 100,000 times since it launched on October 4.

In Bahrain, Al Khalifa operates Too Far, a curatorial agency that promotes Gulf artwork, and runs educationa­l programmes to support emerging Arab artists. This is the first exhibition she has curated in Saudi, though she has collaborat­ed with the country’s art community before. In 2013, in London, she curated In the Open, an exhibition on Bahraini art for

the Saudi organisati­on Edge of Arabia. In many ways Imprint has come full circle from her first engagement with Gulf art, which the curator speaks about in terms of identity and recognitio­n. Recalling her experience visiting Edge of Arabia’s well-known show of Arab artists, #ComeTogeth­er at the Truman Brewery in East London in 2012, she says: “It was a first for me to see myself and my culture up there on the walls. It felt incredible because it is a form of recognitio­n, an acknowledg­ement and an appreciati­on of existence.”

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 ?? Photos Misk Art Institute ?? Above, ‘Al Fulle’ documents bridal wedding attire featuring jasmine flowers. Top left, ‘ Tradition and Modernity’ juxtaposes a mobile phone with a traditiona­l coffee pot
Photos Misk Art Institute Above, ‘Al Fulle’ documents bridal wedding attire featuring jasmine flowers. Top left, ‘ Tradition and Modernity’ juxtaposes a mobile phone with a traditiona­l coffee pot

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