In collaboration with Athr Gallery, ARTSPACE Dubai presents A Line in the Sand;
a group show of seven young and emerging Saudi artists, showing works
across a spectrum of various medias, in a Dubai exhibition for the first
time, curated by Raneem Farsi and Aya Alireza.
The featured artists include; Ahmed Angawi, Musaed Al-Hulis, Rashed
Al-Shashai, Basma Felemban, Sara Khoja, Eyad Maghazel, and Shaweesh.
To
draw a line in the sand is a symbolic gesture that denotes a point
beyond which one cannot go any further. It is a gesture of daring, a
challenge, to test a person’s courage and resolve to take the next step.
However, at the end of the day, it is but a line in sand, a transitory
mark that will fade as it is dissolved by the very sand it is drawn on.
It is but a harmless illusion of danger, a line whose substance is more
in mind than in matter.
Each
of the participating artists is pushing the boundaries, and braving the
limitations set by their environment, limitations that are both real;
in the form of the everyday obstacles an artist faces, and perceived; in
the form of the restrictions imposed upon themselves in their
imagination. The latter are the most difficult to overcome.
These
young artists are conquering these mental obstacles, and stepping over
the line in the sand. Their works are a confrontation of themselves in
their attempts to conceptualize ideas and notions that are dearest to
their hearts and at the forefronts of their minds, be they personal,
spiritual, social or political, with the sole purpose of dissolving the
barriers that separate us via a universal form of communication.
A Line in the Sand
does not just reveal artists overcoming barriers. There are two sides
to every barrier, as there are two faces to every coin. The exhibition
seeks to flip the coin, as the artists themselves not only step over the
line, but draw it; The artists aim to challenge and engage the visitors
in turn, not merely to view the works, but in fact to interpret them,
for only with this two-way exchange can communication and dialogue
succeed, and barriers truly dissolved.
No comments:
Post a Comment