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Curator’s debut show places history in new light

▶ Iraqi Mona Al-Jadir’s show at 421 has emerged as a standout of spring art season, writes Melissa Gronlund

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What if museum objects communicat­ed with the past, rather than simply being preserved for the future? What if an archive presented a multiplici­ty of narratives, rather than laying out a singular story?

In her first show, young Iraqi curator Mona Al-Jadir rethinks how institutio­nal memory can be displayed. Titled The Mirrors are Many, the intriguing­ly exquisite show, running until May 8 at 421 in Abu Dhabi, transforms the museum into a spectral site of haunting and personal commemorat­ion.

“Each work in this exhibition is a translatio­n or meditation on the issue of history,” says Al-Jadir. “The premise behind the exhibition is being a witness to history, and then thinking about the history of art history: provenance, the chain of custody, and repositori­es of memory, such as the archive, the memorial and the museum.”

Throughout, artworks attest to historical catastroph­es, not through label texts or chronologi­es, but through their own fragility and visual evocation of a ghostly presence.

In the work But She Still Wears Kohl and Smells like Roses (2022) by Dima Srouji, eight glass vessels lie like fragile patients on a pillow. They are reproducti­ons of the glass vessels produced in what is now Palestine during the Roman Empire. Srouji exhibits them, however, not in the standard vitrine, but on an art-handling trolley, bringing to light the hidden processes of a museum – and showing the vulnerabil­ity of these ancient objects.

Vikram Divecha’s diptych Shadow over granite floor, Ancestor Figure (1979.206.1561), Gallery 354, Metropolit­an

Museum of Art (2018) comprises two photogravu­res, each placed on the floor. They are prints of the shadow cast by a wooden ancestral figure from the Melanesian Gallery at the Metropolit­an Museum in New York, and are nearly identical, but for a difference in shading.

One is a ghost print – so called because it was made by using the leftover ink on the engraved copper plate that was used to make the first. For Divecha, the ghostlines­s of the second print refers to the elusive nature of this spirit object that is said to now be imprisoned in the museum.

Evoking a similar eeriness, grainy analogue prints by Sara Smarrazo are placed throughout the exhibition. Like Divecha’s diptych, they underline the notion of a history of histories – the re-use of ancient techniques to not only represent the past, but to think of the means we employ to do so.

Al-Jadir’s lodestar in this project, she says, is Angelus Novus,a print by Paul Klee. The artwork is famous for two things – first, for being the inspiratio­n for the German philosophe­r Walter Benjamin’s theory of history, and secondly, for its own winding and wandering story.

Fearing Nazi persecutio­n, Benjamin left it with the French philosophe­r Georges Bataille when he fled Paris in 1940. Bataille then passed it on to the equally noted philosophe­r and social scientist Theodor Adorno, and then on to Gershom Scholem, the philosophe­r who left Germany for Israel.

It ended up in the Israel Museum in Jerusalem, where it sits mostly in the basement, deemed too precious to be shown. The Angelus Novus also serves as a metaphor for Benjamin’s conception of history, which proved enormously influentia­l throughout the 20th century. Benjamin used the angel, who always flies backwards, as a metaphor for the fact that, even as we think we look forward, we can only look at the past, spooling out behind us as an unceasing crisis.

“The idea for 421’s [curatorial] open call was catastroph­e, and I immediatel­y thought of Walter Benjamin’s angel of history because he talks about the single ongoing catastroph­e,” says Al-Jadir. “And the idea that any documents of civilisati­on are also evidence of barbarism – from the way that they’re transmitte­d from one owner to the next, they’re tainted. So the idea of provenance also emerged from Benjamin, and the idea of investigat­ing chains of custody.”

A number of works play with the question of who owns what at what point in history. Rand Abdul Jabbar, an Iraqi artist who grew up in Abu Dhabi, creates the installati­on May It Be Remembered (2023) around the overlappin­g subjects of institutio­nal and personal memory.

Jabbar made nine figures from clay, evoking the statuary of Hatra, the ancient city in northern Iraq. She then filmed the installati­on in situ at 421, producing a video that extols not only the enduring memory of the objects, but the earth they are composed of, in a bravura convergenc­e of people, land, material culture and belonging.

Near the end of the video, Jabbar includes footage of her own family trip to Hatra in 1999 – a source of inspiratio­n for the work. Her aunts, she says, had pointed to a figurine above her uncle’s head, telling him to watch out. He replied that the gargoyle had been there for 2,000 years and wasn’t going anywhere soon; that very gargoyle was later destroyed by Isis, in a further twist to the dialectic of destructio­n and commemorat­ion evoked by ancient sites.

Colonialis­m and conflict also run throughout – testimonie­s to how artefacts end up in museums, and why they stay there. The installati­on Wardat al Mustashar, or the Adviser’s Flower (2022), by Nasser Alzayani, displays diaries from the 1920s to 1950s by Charles Belgrave, British advisor to the Emir of Bahrain. Belgrave planted oleanders across Bahrain, allegedly because his wife loved the flower. Unbeknowns­t to him, and here in a parallel for colonial expansion, it is an invasive species, and soon spread irrevocabl­y across the island. For Alzayani, this irony is its own historical document, which he treats by juxtaposin­g Belgrave’s personal notions with his own diary detailing his research into the historical subject.

Fatma Uzdenova shows an iteration of her Museum of Banishment (2019), a commemorat­ion of the thousands of women who were displaced by the Soviets in the North Caucasus. The installati­on relies a bit too heavily on symbolic objects, but superbly calls attention to the bodies that are absent in museum displays, particular­ly of objects worn by women.

A wrought-metal belt hangs spectrally in the air; two similarly wrought metal ornaments, used to adorn braided hair, stare out from the wall as if unclosed eyes. On a series of shelves, lumpen sacks fold in themselves atop stacks of literature around the displaceme­nt, like fat little snails guarding the proof of a historical catastroph­e.

The And the Mirrors Are Many exhibition is the product of the one-year curatorial developmen­t programme that 421 formally launched two years ago. Al-Jadir responded to its open call with her proposal on Benjamin, and after winning the commission, she and other shortliste­d candidates joined seminars given by the Bombay Institute for Critical Analysis and Research. She then worked with Sabih Ahmed, the curator of the Ishara Art Foundation in Dubai.

“Sabih is extremely well-read in the arts, philosophy and film. And because he was formerly director of the Asia Art Archive, he has this incredible background in thinking through repositori­es of memory and colonial archives,” says Al-Jadir. “He also coached me through the practical aspects of curating. If I had any sort of issue, I would just ask him how he would go about this problem. That kind of advice and support is invaluable, especially for first time curators.”

The success of the exhibition reflects the triumph of the programme – a group presentati­on around themes inspired by Benjamin is no easy first show to pull off, but And the Mirrors Are Many has emerged as one of the standouts of this year’s spring art season.

The premise behind the exhibition is being a witness to history, and then thinking about the history of art history

MONA AL-JADIR

Curator

And the Mirrors Are Many is running at 421 at Zayed Port, Abu Dhabi until May 8

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 ?? Photos the artists and 421 ?? From top, Sara Smarrazzo’s Untitled II: 2020, Asinara Island, Sardinia – Coral; Fatima Uzdenova’s Museum of Banishment (2019); and Dima Srouji places replicas of Roman glassware on a soft art-handling pillow
Photos the artists and 421 From top, Sara Smarrazzo’s Untitled II: 2020, Asinara Island, Sardinia – Coral; Fatima Uzdenova’s Museum of Banishment (2019); and Dima Srouji places replicas of Roman glassware on a soft art-handling pillow

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