logo
Sharjah Biennial returns with powerful message of solidarity

Sharjah Biennial returns with powerful message of solidarity

The National05-02-2025
Sharjah Biennial returns on Thursday, showcasing more than 650 works of contemporary art across the emirate. The event, which will be running until June 15, is being held under the title To Carry, a theme which reflects the memories and traditions we individually carry with us. The works interpret the theme in several ways, touching on migrant experiences, sidelined histories or re-examining ancient customs in a new light. Sheikha Hoor Al Qasimi, president and director of the Sharjah Art Foundation, the organising body behind the biennial, said the event is a celebration of diverse practices and cultures as much as it is a moment of international solidarity. 'The biennial had its first edition in April 1993, 32 years ago, making it the longest continuously running biennial in the region,' she said. The event, Sheikha Hoor added, has developed over the years, achieving 'remarkable acclaim and an unassailable reputation, both regionally and internationally". This year builds on that history, she said. 'These 650 works offer us an evolving collection of narratives across time, place, ideas and cultures, elaborating on the biennial theme of what to carry and how to carry it,' she added. Works by almost 200 artists are on show across 17 locations in Sharjah, extending beyond the city to sites in Al Hamriyah, Al Dhaid and Kalba. The biennial has been curated by Alia Swastika, Amal Khalaf, Megan Tamati-Quennell, Natasha Ginwala and Zeynep Oz. The curators come from disparate practices and backgrounds. Their research ranges from the role of storytelling in collective learning and activism to explorations of societal and economic systems. As such, each has brought a distinct focus to the biennial and its theme. This diversity is reflected in the exhibited works. 'As we engage with the biennial, you'll sometimes find the projects of different curators converging within a single venue,' Sheikha Hoor said. 'At other sites, the story of one curator unfolds across the entire space.' Given the event's theme, Sheikha Hoor said it was important to take a moment and recognise the tribulations of those in less fortunate places around the globe. 'Before I end my speech, I would like to just ask everyone to keep in mind the people of Palestine, Lebanon, Sudan, the Congo, Armenia and all other parts of the world where people are less fortunate than ourselves,' she said. 'We have to be in solidarity. If there's anything we learnt from our fathers and grandfathers and mothers, it is that they had such immense solidarities and there is a beauty in coming together and being in solidarity with one another. I hope with us being in solidarity, we can pray and hope for a better future and for a free Palestine.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Sharjah Art Foundation launches Studio and Residency Programmes
Sharjah Art Foundation launches Studio and Residency Programmes

Sharjah 24

time30-06-2025

  • Sharjah 24

Sharjah Art Foundation launches Studio and Residency Programmes

The Studio Programme makes a wide range of spaces available to creatives at different stages of their careers, offering studio leases for up to three years. Additionally, free work spaces are offered to recent fine arts graduates and PhD candidates to assist them in periods of transition. The Residency Programme, open to visual artists, performance artists, writers, poets, researchers, musicians, filmmakers and other creatives who wish to pursue their experimental, interdisciplinary practice, offers flights and transportation to Sharjah, accommodation and a monthly stipend. Residents will also have access to the Foundation's institutional networks and resources. The application process for the Residency Programme will begin soon, while the open call for the Studio Programme will go out later in the year. Our Venues: Collections Building, Sharjah City The Collections Building, used in the past for exhibitions and artwork storage, currently hosts workshops and artist studios. Bait Obaid Al Shamsi, Sharjah City Bait Obaid Al Shamsi, a creek-side heritage house in the Al Shuwaiheen neighbourhood, was the personal residence of pearl merchant Obaid Bin Hamad Al Shamsi and his family until the 1970s. Dating to the mid-nineteenth century, the complex comprises 16 rooms built around an airy central courtyard. In the late 1990s, the house was restored and repurposed as a suite of artist studios and exhibition spaces. The complex offers panoramic views of the creek from its rooftop terrace. Serving as a Sharjah Biennial venue for large-scale installations and performances since 2009, Bait Obaid Al Shamsi also hosts regular art workshops, residencies and year-round events. Bait Al Serkal, Sharjah City Once the personal residence of Issa Bin Abdul Latif Al Serkal, the British Commissioner for the Arabian Gulf, and later home to the late Sheikh Mohammed Bin Saqr Al Qasimi, Bait Al Serkal dates to the nineteenth century. Converted into Sharjah's first maternity hospital in the early 1960s, the heritage house was restored and transformed into an arts and cultural centre in the mid-1990s. Small rooms lining arched corridors as well as an open courtyard, large hall and portico on the upper level are used for Sharjah Biennials and a range of other Foundation programming. Al Hamriyah Studios, Al Hamriyah Built on the site of a former souq near the Arabian Gulf coastline, Al Hamriyah Studios offers multifunctional spaces for the production and exhibition of artworks. Combining avant-garde and modern architectural technologies, the complex preserves much of the original footprint of the market, including the central courtyard. Landscaped with local greenery and sculpture, the outdoor area now serves as a place for quiet contemplation or conversation. The venue has hosted exhibitions, site-specific installations, performances and outdoor film screenings. Designed by architect Khaled Al Najjar, Al Hamriyah Studios was inaugurated by the Foundation in 2017. Kalba Ice Factory, Kalba Retrofitted by Lima-based 51-1 Arquitectos to preserve the feel of open industrial spaces, Kalba Ice Factory boasts well-lighted exhibition areas, art studios and residential accommodation within a natural setting. The complex is located next to Kalba Creek and Al Qurm mangroves, home to many endangered species of birds, turtles and lizards. The 1970s brutalist concrete structure, enclosed by the saw-tooth silhouette of a corrugated metal roof, was once a fish feed mill and ice storage facility. Acquired by Sharjah Art Foundation in 2012, it has been used as Sharjah Biennial venue since 2015.

SAF announces curators of Sharjah Biennial 17
SAF announces curators of Sharjah Biennial 17

Sharjah 24

time24-06-2025

  • Sharjah 24

SAF announces curators of Sharjah Biennial 17

Harutyunyan is Professor of Contemporary Art and Theory, Berlin University of the Arts and Nascimento is an independent curator and architect based in Luanda. 'Since 2003, Sharjah Biennial has been a platform for creative experimentation, collaboration and social impact. Rooted in our local context, we have fostered a place of significant regional and international exchange, bridging cultures and shared histories,' says Hoor Al Qasimi, President and Director of Sharjah Art Foundation. 'Angela Harutyunyan and Paula Nascimento each bring distinct perspectives shaped by their individual practices. Sharjah Biennial 17 will be a space for critical engagement and collective reflection, where their curatorial visions can collaboratively explore new contemporary realities.' Working in close collaboration, the curators will shape the Biennial as a space for critical reflection and experimental exhibition-making, exploring alternative contemporary realities and the imaginative potential of art, through a wide range of artistic projects presented in sites across Sharjah. 'The possibilities and limitations of the biennial form in making visible the uneven temporal rhythms that pulsate beneath contemporaneity are of particular interest to me,' says Harutyunyan. 'I would like to examine the ways in which artworks encapsulate and figurate decaying but undead afterlives of the emancipatory projects of non-capitalist modernity.' For Paula Nascimento, biennials are fundamental spaces to experiment with forms and models of exhibition-making, and as well as places for gathering communities and fostering social and physical transformation. 'I am interested in thinking with artists and in the articulations between artmaking and infrastructure in an expanded way, as well as exploring art's capacity to imagine and propose spaces and other worlds and forms of relations,' she says.

SAF announces Autumn 2025 progs, launch of 2 initiatives
SAF announces Autumn 2025 progs, launch of 2 initiatives

Sharjah 24

time04-06-2025

  • Sharjah 24

SAF announces Autumn 2025 progs, launch of 2 initiatives

The season includes the 2025 editions of Perform Sharjah, Sharjah Film Platform and Focal Point—the Foundation's annual film festival, performance programme, art book fair in addition to music events. Internationally, recent and new work by artist Mounira Al Solh is on view in her mid-career solo exhibition at The Bonnefanten, Maastricht, co-organised by Sharjah Art Foundation, from 7 June 2025 to 11 January 2026. The exhibition will be on view in Sharjah in 2027. Singing Wells' Sharjah Biennial 16 project Sonic Inheritances, commissioned by Sharjah Art Foundation and Bergen Assembly, will be on view at the 5th Bergen Assembly, Norway (11 September–9 November 2025). Stephanie Comilang's Search for Life II, commissioned by TBA21, Sharjah Art Foundation and The Vega Foundation, is on view in CARA, New York, until 10 August 2025. Additionally, premiering at the Festival d'Avignon in July is Laaroussa Quartet by Selma and Sofiane Ouissi supported by Sharjah Art Foundation and the presentation of Magec / The Desert by Radouan Mriziga co-produced by the Foundation. These performances will be presented at Perform Sharjah's upcoming season in Autumn 2025. Exhibition programme Afra Al Dhaheri The autumn season begins with the first institutional solo show of Afra Al Dhaheri. The exhibition invites the audience to reflect on the textures and rhythms of temporality by focusing on the artist's mixed media works which experiment with repetition, layering and accumulation. Leda Catunda Marking the first major solo exhibition of artist Leda Catunda in the region, this presentation brings together a vibrant selection of her haptic works from the 1980s to the present. Catunda's practice crafts together readymade graphics, fabrics and everyday items. Co-organised with Halle für Kunst Steiermark, Graz, the exhibition will travel to Austria in June 2026. Rachid Koraïchi Spanning five decades of his practice, this major survey traces artist Rachid Koraïchi's ongoing exploration into signs and symbols from a diverse range of languages and cultural traditions, through multifaceted installations inspired by the legacy of Islamic mysticism. Works from the Sharjah Art Foundation Collection For the first time since its restoration, Kalba Ice Factory, the Foundation's east coast venue, hosts a large-scale presentation of works from the Sharjah Art Foundation Collection. New openings Photography gallery and Al Majarrah Park November marks the launch of two landmark initiatives. In Al Manakh, the Foundation opens a new photography gallery housed in a repurposed former telecommunications building. The inaugural presentation features a wide-ranging selection of photographs from the Foundation's collection. Simultaneously, Al Majarrah Park, adjacent to Rain Room Sharjah, will open to the public following its transformation by the artist collective Superflex in close collaboration with Schul landscape architects, and local residents. Annual events Perform Sharjah Sharjah Art Foundation's performing arts season returns this October with the fourth edition of Perform Sharjah, expanding its presence across the cities of Sharjah and Khorfakkan. With a diverse lineup reflecting and celebrating Sharjah's rich cultural fabric, the season will create shared experiences to connect people through art in familiar and unexpected spaces. Sharjah Film Platform 8 The eighth edition of Sharjah Film Platform, the Foundation's annual festival of independent cinema and experimental filmmaking, includes the UAE premieres of a selection of films nominated by an international committee, all of which will compete for the Sharjah Film Platform Awards. Focal Point Sharjah Art Foundation's annual art book fair showcases independent bookmaking from around the world. A critical space for knowledge-sharing and community building, the fair features a compelling selection of printed material by cultural producers who expand and experiment with the medium of publishing. It also includes workshops for print and design enthusiasts. Music programme Sharjah Art Foundation is organising listening sessions and gatherings for the local community as well as concerts, workshops and talks. Sharjah will welcome a diverse group of musicians, who will perform and share their experiences of both traditional and experimental musical forms. A conference on maritime music from the Western Indian Ocean is also planned for the end of the year. Two book projects will be launched during Focal Point. More details will be available closer to the dates of the events.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store