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Rain Room, Sharjah
Sharjah Art Foundation presents Rain Room for the first time in the Middle East. The installation is permanently sited in Al Majarrah, Sharjah.
Random International
2012
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Sharjah Art Foundation presents Rain Room for the first time in the Middle East. The installation is permanently sited in Al Majarrah, Sharjah.
Random International
2012
These opening lines introduce The Interview, an indirect narration of the real-life story of Dr Abdul Nabi, an Iraqi doctor who came to the United States in 2008.
Işıl Eğrikavuk
2008
David Hammons
David Hammons interrogates the political and social landscape
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Bahar Behbahani
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Almagul Menlibayeva
Drawing from Eurasian nomadic and Indigenous folklore, Almagul Menlibayeva’s work grapples with themes of displacement,
ethnic erasure and environmental destruction under totalitarian rule in post-Soviet Central Asia.
Marisol Mendez
Marisol Mendez’s work journeys into ancestral and collective histories of colonialism, racism and traditionalism—all of which shaped her experience of growing up in Cochabamba, Bolivia.
Shiraz Bayjoo
Shiraz Bayjoo’s practice elucidates forgotten histories that contain multiple layers of meaning and visual culture. Mainly working with repurposed archival displays, his works subvert oppressive western historical narratives that have defined the psyches of colonised peoples.
Naiza Khan
With ecological research at the centre of her intersecting artistic interests, Naiza Khan considers the ways in which geography materialises power and facilitates the collective remembrance of colonial histories.
Raheleh Filsoofi
Raheleh Filsoofi’s practice addresses the customs that mediate everyday experiences through research, education, community- centred work and performance.
Shelley Niro
Shelley Niro’s practice challenges the clichéd perceptions and circumscribed expectations projected onto First Nations communities.
Emily Kame Kngwarreye
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Fathi Hassan
Fathi Hassan explores the colonial erasure of ancient languages and oral histories as well as the ambivalence and fallibility of semiotic meaning.
Eubena Nampitjin
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Pamela Phatsimo Sunstrum
Pamela Phatsimo Sunstrum’s boundary-defying practice attempts to transfigure notions of power and agency for Black subjectivity within systems that would otherwise dismiss the complexity and nuances of its cultural and intellectual histories.
Nilima Sheikh
Combining ancient mythology with modern history, Nilima Sheikh draws on diverse narrative and visual layering to compose symbolic dramaturgies and ephemeral landscapes dealing with themes of migration, exile, tradition and poetry.
Sangeeta Sandrasegar
In her bodies of work, Sangeeta Sandrasegar constructs a continuous narrative centred upon the relationships of migrant communities to their homelands.
Queenie McKenzie
Queenie McKenzie (1915–1998) depicted the Aboriginal experience through bold autobiographical canvases that offer insight into life on the remote cattle stations of the East Kimberley region in early twentieth-century Australia.
Natalie Ball
Natalie Ball investigates histories of Native American symbolism in dialogue with contemporary Indigenous iconography to propose alternative definitions of Native life.