Autumn 2021


Art & Auctions
Fostering Creativity


The UAE capital Abu Dhabi is preparing to welcome artists and art-lovers once again physically for the Abu Dhabi Art 2021 show to be held in November.

After being held as a virtual event in 2020, Abu Dhabi Art is making a triumphant return in physical form this year, taking place from November 17 to 21 at Manarat Al Saadiyat.

Since its inception in 2007, Abu Dhabi Art has played an integral role in developing the evolving art scene in Abu Dhabi and the wider emirates. In its 13th edition this year, Abu Dhabi Art’s agenda extends beyond the annual five-day fair with a number of exhibitions and commissions that will continue beyond the fair walls.

“We are delighted to be able to bring a physical experience to our visitors this year,” said Dyala Nusseibeh, Director of Abu Dhabi Art. “It was important to enable our guest curators to bring their exhibitions and research into material form at the fair this year, to enable gallery exhibitors to once again connect first-hand with our audience and show their works in real life as well as to commission new artists to create site-specific works for the emirate. Across all these initiatives rests an abiding emphasis on a diverse and accessible public engagement programme, on offering an important meeting point for international and local artists and galleries and on supporting the local art ecosystem through our flagship event in November.”

This year, the globally respected Simon Njami and Rose Lejeune will be the guest curators, while commissioned works by artists Aya Haidar, Hazem Harb, Dr Najat Makki, Rasheed Araeen and Richard Atugonza will be included in the Beyond: Artist Commissions programme.

Alongside these works, additional works by exhibiting artists including Alfredo Jaar represented by Giorgio Persano Gallery (Turin), Hera Büyüktaşcıyan, represented by Green Art Gallery (Dubai), Siah Armajani represented by Rossi & Rossi (London, Hong Kong), and Zineb Sedira represented by The Third Line (Dubai) will also be featured as part of Abu Dhabi Art’s special installation sector, In & Around.

Each year, distinguished guest curators work closely with a number of galleries exhibiting at the fair to present curated gallery sectors and programmes. This year, Njami’s gallery sector will draw connections between artists through the language of music, while Lejeune will bring together a new performance art programme. Both guest curators had previously contributed to the virtual edition of the fair in 2020 and are back this year to contribute in-person.

The Beyond: Artist Commissions programme – launched in 2017 to present new, site-specific public installations by established artists in public spaces across the emirate – will see several new commissioned installations at locations from Liwa and Al Ain to the city centre of Abu Dhabi. Beyond: Artist Commissions will remain open for three months as part of Abu Dhabi Art’s year-round programming.

Each year, the fair also features In & Around, with distributed spaces throughout the fair venue for galleries to show large-scale installations outside their booth space.

For the fair’s first ever digital edition in 2020, Njami curated ‘The Day After’, dedicated to contemporary art from across the African continent, in an online format only. This year, Njami will spotlight selected artists and galleries under a new curatorial framework, Kind of Blue. The title of the exhibition references an album by Miles Davis, with Njami positioning Jazz music as a metaphor for the open-ended parameters of the exhibition. Kind of Blue likens galleries to orchestras, each presenting musicians who together create a collective project that is wider than their singular expression. Kind of Blue references the improvisation harnessed by the creation of jazz music as a means to create an exploratory space and dialogue for these artworks to be understood together. Njami will be presenting his curatorial vision at the fair, giving audiences the opportunity to explore and experience this dynamic position first-hand in November.

Lejeune, curator of the fair’s public Performing Arts Programme in 2020, is also returning for the 2021 edition with a diverse line-up of performances across different locations in Abu Dhabi. Lejeune will be commissioning four artists including Louise Hervé and Clovis Maillet, French artists who explore projections of the future and anthropological knowledge through the language of performance and film; Mays Albaik, a Palestinian interdisciplinary visual artist interweaving poetry, socio-politics and geography; Rand Abdul Jabbar, an Abu Dhabi-based Iraqi multi-disciplinary artist whose socially engaged works intersect architecture and visual arts; and Moscow-based Taus Makhacheva, whose Dagestan cultural origins inform her installation and performance art practice. Each commissioned artist will select a site for a live performance in different locations around Abu Dhabi and at the fair with the aim of offering an abstract and poetic experience of different sculptural landmarks and sceneries around the city.

Meanwhile, the Beyond: Artist Commissions segment will feature new works by Aya Haidar, a British-Lebanese multimedia artist who focuses on the use of found and recycled objects exploring loss, migration and memory; Hazem Harb, a Palestinian artist living between Rome and Dubai who delves into the spatial relationship between different phenomena such as place and time; Dr Najat Makki, a pioneering Emirati contemporary artist who works with large-scale installations; Rasheed Araeen, an early pioneer of minimalism who is well-known for his formal geometric sculptures; and Richard Atugonza, a Uganda-born sculptor who draws inspiration from his immediate surroundings. The artists’ works will be revealed during the fair and will remain on view to the public until January 22, 2022.

Abu Dhabi Art’s year-round talks programme, Collectors Forum, is curated by Middle Eastern art expert and former deputy chairman of Sotheby’s, Roxane Zand. The talks started earlier this year with How are NFTS taking over the art world? and will continue until the end of the year. The Collectors Forum is a series of cultural talks targeting art collectors, and features some of the art world’s leading figures, with the aim of engaging audiences in discussions related to the history of the UAE and contemporary art practice in the country and around the world.

Abu Dhabi Art’s Beyond: Emerging Artists is curated by Sam Bardaouil and Till Fellrath, co-founders of multidisciplinary curatorial platform Art Reoriented. They have chosen three UAE-based emerging artists – Hashel Al Lamki, Maitha Abdalla and Christopher Benton – to participate in and create new commissioned works for this year’s fair. Their exhibition will be on show at Manarat Al Saadiyat from November 17 to December 4. This year’s programme is also the inaugural commission of Abu Dhabi Art’s newly launched initiative, Friends of Abu Dhabi Art.





© Al Hilal Group all rights reserved. Designed & Developed by North Star.