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Saudi artist’s vast, impactful installati­on takes root at Venice Biennale

▶ Muhannad Shono tells Melissa Gronlund that ‘The Teaching Tree’ is symbolic of the changes taking place in his country

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“We wanted it to extend past the doors of the pavilion,” says Muhannad Shono of The Teaching Tree, the moody, monstrous installati­on he has created for the National Pavilion of Saudi Arabia at the Venice Biennale. “It’s trying to escape its walls.”

Comprising 260 square meters of woven dried palm leaves – all dyed black – The Teaching Tree begins with the thin line of a point, like the beak of a bird, and widens as it stretches towards the pavilion entrance.

The undulating object is internally animated by a pneumatic machine, so that it gives the impression of breathing. The scent of dried palm leaves fills the air and the slow sound of the lungs evoke a beast at rest – slain, perhaps, or just waiting.

The work also begins conceptual­ly from the idea of the line, or the black graphic mark, which Shono interprets as a symbol of artistic creativity and a personal reference to his past.

He started his art career at the back of the classroom, drawing black-ink comics in his notebooks. The line is now fundamenta­l to his practice, appearing across his installati­ons. Here, he says, it creates a narrative: from being a symbol of restrictio­n, as in his youth when his creativity was discourage­d, to today, where art is becoming an agent of change. “The work is an embodiment of the living imaginatio­n. It’s an act of creative resistance. Who’s in control of our narratives or stories? Is the black line being used to redact and restrict the word and the image? Or are we using it to feed the imaginatio­n?”

It’s an impactful work in a biennial that requires artworks to have a bit of spectacle to stand out. The pavilion is curated by Reem Fadda, director of Abu Dhabi’s Cultural Foundation, with assistance from Rotana Shaker.

For Shono, one of the most active members of the growing Saudi art scene, it also responds to the changes that the country is undergoing. Though Shono is not nostalgic about the past, he believes there is a connection between the social restrictio­ns experience­d by his generation and the creativity among that age group in the country today.

“Restrictio­ns and limitation­s – they actually create more fertile grounds and stronger forms of expression,” he says. “If you live in a society that’s equitable and fair, that’s nice. But what happens to art and expression? It diminishes because there’s nothing to push against.

“This work, and me being here, is a statement. It’s a timeline, a journey, not only my story, but a collective, irrepressi­ble kind of expression that’s happening now in Saudi Arabia being reborn.”

In Shono’s case, this is not only to do with the kingdom’s support of the arts but also of Shono himself – his parents were immigrants to the country, and now he finds himself representi­ng it on the world stage.

The Teaching Tree’s orientatio­n towards the future positions the pavilion at odds with the bulk of the biennial, particular­ly Cecilia Alemani’s curated exhibition The Milk of Dreams. Installed elsewhere in the Arsenale and in the Giardini’s Internatio­nal Pavilion, this exhibition is by turns recuperati­ve and market-oriented, with a number of talented artists from marginal places whose work has previously been ignored.

Other rooms seem more influenced by market trends in New York, where the Italian curator lives. In the national pavilions, too, such as the strong presentati­ons of Estonia and France, the past is something to be mined and reframed. Archival works and deconstruc­tions dominate alongside Alemani’s reclamatio­n of artists, mostly female or from non-Nato countries.

The increased representa­tion is to be celebrated, and the number of women and black

It’s a timeline, a journey, not only my story, but a collective, irrepressi­ble kind of expression that’s happening now in Saudi Arabia being reborn

artists at the biennial have been the subject of numerous headlines. But Shono’s trajectory suggests an alternativ­e path: he is still working largely outside of the market, with most of his commission­s granted by the growing Saudi Arabia’s statebacke­d infrastruc­ture.

The activity in Saudi Arabia, and the financial resources being given to the arts there, keeps the focus on what’s coming rather than a sifting of what’s come before.

The presentati­on of the National Pavilion of Saudi Arabia, for the third time in the art biennial, also forms part of this push to bring the kingdom on to the world stage, and Shono is up front about the way Saudi Arabia is sometimes perceived internatio­nally. Here, The Teaching Tree operates as a “misunderst­ood” installati­on, he says, which reflects how “we are often in Saudi lumped up as stereotype or an editorial headline”.

“But once you enter into the [proverbial] forest, and start to really appreciate the leaves and the trees, you realise that there’s more connected lines between us and others,” he says. “That’s where understand­ing can happen. Because each line here is individual.”

The installati­on underlines how this Saudi orientatio­n towards the future affects the language of the work itself, privilegin­g abstractio­ns over archives and paintings that might represent the affairs of the past.

As Shono continues his practice, balancing its origins in his comic narratives against single installati­ons, his artworks seem to both contract into one, single idea (one material, repeated, scaled up) as well as expanding into several sensorial vectors, incorporat­ing smells and machinery, or elsewhere, smoke and fire, as if they want to break free.

The Teaching Tree is no exception. Viscerally charged, it is an enigmatic work, drawing its power not so much from the stories it tells, but from its effect on the viewer in the present.

The Teaching Tree is on view at the National Pavilion of Saudi Arabia in the Arsenale, Venice, until November 27

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 ?? The Visual Arts Commission, Saudi Arabia ?? Muhannad Shono says ‘The Teaching Tree’, which is made with woven dried palm leaves, all dyed black, is an act of creative resistance
The Visual Arts Commission, Saudi Arabia Muhannad Shono says ‘The Teaching Tree’, which is made with woven dried palm leaves, all dyed black, is an act of creative resistance
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Muhannad Shono

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