The National - News

LOUVRE ABU DHABI’S BIG DRAWS COMING SOON, FROM SPANISH 10TH-CENTURY PYXIS TO AFRICAN ROYALTY

▶ UAE capital museum set to unveil work from the department of Islamic Arts at Musee du Louvre, reports Razmig Bedirian

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As Leonardo da Vinci’s Saint John the Baptist nears the end of its time at Louvre Abu Dhabi, another masterpiec­e is set to become the museum’s new highlight loan.

Saint John the Baptist will be returned to Musee du Louvre by the end of the year. The French institutio­n lent the 16th-century oil on wood painting to Louvre Abu Dhabi in November 2022 as part of the UAE museum’s fifth anniversar­y celebratio­ns.

The painting is notable for its depiction of a youthful Saint John, who was portrayed as a gaunt figure up until Leonardo’s work. It is considered to be one of the Italian polymath’s key works and a prime example of his genius. The artist carried the painting with him and ceaselessl­y worked on it until his death in 1519.

The painting is dense with historical and artistic merit. However, the work that will take its place is just as impressive. It is older and has connotatio­ns closer to home.

Pyxis in the name of Al-Mughira will be displayed at Louvre Abu Dhabi from November. It will be on loan from the department of Islamic Arts at Musee du Louvre.

Originatin­g from Spain’s Umayyad period in the 10th century, this small ivory container showcases intricate carvings that push the boundaries of the material used. Indeed, the ivory is carved so thinly that certain parts of the container become almost translucen­t when held up to the light. “There’s some kind of magic when you take one material and, because of the treatment, you push it to its maximum,” says Manuel Rabate, director of Louvre Abu Dhabi. “When you get an opaque material to become transparen­t, it’s because you’ve treated it [expertly]. You go too far and you break it.”

Rabate adds that it requires a high level of technique and precision to make a material like ivory translucen­t. The container was made in a workshop within the fortified palace city of Madinat al-Zahra, near what is today Cordoba. It was created as a present for the son of Abd al-Rahman III, the Umayyad Emir of Cordoba.

The inscriptio­n running across the base of the lid reads: “Blessing from God, goodwill, happiness and prosperity to al-Mughira, son of the Commander of the Faithful, may God’s mercy [be upon him], made in the year 357 [Hijri]”.

The engravings on the pyxis feature motifs that symbolise the power of the Umayyad Caliphate. These include falcon nests, palm trees and images of fighting bulls and lions, perhaps taking inspiratio­n from the story within Kalila wa Dimna. An exhibition surroundin­g the collection of fables by Ibn al-Muqaffa is currently on view at Louvre Abu Dhabi.

Inside the permanent galleries of Louvre Abu Dhabi, Pyxis in the name of Al-Mughira will have its own dedicated room, featuring scenograph­y designed to accentuate the intricacie­s of the artwork’s craftsmans­hip. It will be surrounded, Rabate says, with “architectu­ral elements” that aim to convey the time and context in which the work was created.

Pyxis in the name of Al-Mughira, Rabate says, sustains Louvre Abu Dhabi’s mission of highlighti­ng human creativity and cross-cultural understand­ing. This objective also resonates throughout the three exhibition­s planned for the upcoming season.

Louvre Abu Dhabi Art Here 2024 and Richard Mille Art Prize

The fourth Richard Mille Art Prize, an annual initiative organised by Louvre Abu Dhabi in partnershi­p with the luxury Swiss watchmakin­g brand, will revolve around the theme of

Awakenings. The competitio­n is being expanded to include submission­s from North Africa, alongside the usual Gulf entires. The expansion comes as part of a vision by this year’s curator Simon Njami, and art critic and lecturer who has overseen several internatio­nal exhibition­s dedicated to spotlighti­ng African contempora­ry artists. “It’s going to be stimulatin­g,” Rabate says.

As with every year, shortliste­d artists will have the opportunit­y to present their site-specific works at the Art Here exhibition in Louvre Abu Dhabi. A winner will be chosen by a panel in December 2024.

Art Here 2024 will reprise an element it introduced in last year’s exhibition – that is, displaying the shortliste­d works in the outdoor area of

the museum. “We’re doing it again outdoors,” Rabate says. “Because it was a success last year. Really pleasant.”

Art Here 2024 will run from September 20 to December 15

Post-Impression­ism: Beyond Appearance­s

After a 2022 exhibition at Louvre Abu Dhabi explored the significan­ce of the impression­ism movement, Post-Impression­ism: Beyond Appearance­s will delve into the years that -followed and the intense artistic experiment­ation after 1886.

The exhibition will be hosted in partnershi­p with Musee d’Orsay and co-curated by Jean-Remi Touzet, conservato­r for paintings at Musee d’Orsay, alongside Jerome Farigoule, chief curator at Louvre Abu Dhabi, with the support of assistant Aisha Al Ahmadi.

Post-Impression­ism: Beyond Appearance­s will bring together several notable works from Europe as well as the Middle East. These include Vincent van Gogh’s The Bedroom, a legendary work that depicts the Dutch painter’s bedroom and studio in Arles. From the Arab world, meanwhile, two key paintings by Egyptian artist Georges Hanna Sabbagh will feature in the collection – The artist and his family at La Clarte (1920) and The Family; The Sabbagh in Paris (1921).

The exhibition, Rabate says, aims to demonstrat­e the global impact of the post-impression­ist period. “You see how from one starting point, which is the sort of breakthrou­gh, many schools [came about] and we saw masterpiec­es from each of them,” he says. “Most of the energy was happening in Paris, and around Paris, but we also see what it meant for people from around the world.”

Post-Impression­ism: Beyond Appearance­s will run from October 26 to February 9

Kings and Queens of Africa: Forms and Figures of Power

There’s some kind of magic when you take one material and, because of the treatment, you push it to its maximum

MANUEL RABATE

Director of Louvre Abu Dhabi

Next year, Louvre Abu Dhabi is aiming to deliver an impressive exhibition of African art and history explored through the lens of the continent’s royalty. Held in partnershi­p with Musee du Quai Branly, the exhibition will display more than 300 objects that delve into several facets of African culture and traditions that interlaced with the lives of the continent’s kings and queens.

The exhibition will be curated by Helene Joubert, head curator of the African Heritage Unit at Musee du Quai Branly – Jacques Chirac. Joubert will be supported by two associates, El Hadji Malick Ndiaye, curator of Dakar’s Theodore Monod Museum of African Art – one of the oldest art museums in West Africa – and Cindy Olohou, an independen­t curator.

Mariam Al Dhaheri, curatorial assistant at Louvre Abu Dhabi, will also lend her support to the project. One of the highlights of the exhibition will be Ife Head from Nigeria.

The exhibition, Rabate says, is currently being developed in collaborat­ion with African institutio­ns and partners. “We could not only do with our relationsh­ip with French museum. Of course, it’s more diverse than that,” he says. “We’ll use the exhibition as a moment to be again a place of reflection, to discuss what is happening in Africa, which is a very dynamic continent.”

While the three exhibition­s and the arrival of Pyxis in the name of Al-Mughira are highlights of Louvre Abu Dhabi’s upcoming season, they are by no means the sole attraction­s scheduled for the next few months at the museum.

These include talks, activation­s and programmes curated for children.

Kings and Queens of Africa: Forms and Figures of Power will run from January 29 to May 25, 2025

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 ?? Mahmoud Rida / The National ?? Saint John The Baptist by Leonardo da Vinci has been hung at Louvre Abu Dhabi since November 2022
Mahmoud Rida / The National Saint John The Baptist by Leonardo da Vinci has been hung at Louvre Abu Dhabi since November 2022
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 ?? Hughes Dubois; Patrice Schmidt ?? Next year, Louvre Abu Dhabi is aiming to deliver an impressive exhibition of African art and history explored through the lens of the continent’s royalty in 300 objects. One of the key works will be Ife Head from Nigeria, above. Meanwhile, Vincent van Gogh’s The Bedroom, a legendary work that depicts the Dutch painter’s bedroom and studio in Arles, will be the highlight of a new postimpres­sionism exhibition held in the UAE capital museum from October
Hughes Dubois; Patrice Schmidt Next year, Louvre Abu Dhabi is aiming to deliver an impressive exhibition of African art and history explored through the lens of the continent’s royalty in 300 objects. One of the key works will be Ife Head from Nigeria, above. Meanwhile, Vincent van Gogh’s The Bedroom, a legendary work that depicts the Dutch painter’s bedroom and studio in Arles, will be the highlight of a new postimpres­sionism exhibition held in the UAE capital museum from October
 ?? Musee du Louvre ?? Carved out of elephant ivory, Pyxis in the name of Al-Mughira is significan­t for its craftsmans­hip and historical merit
Musee du Louvre Carved out of elephant ivory, Pyxis in the name of Al-Mughira is significan­t for its craftsmans­hip and historical merit

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