Sharjah Art Museum will host the region's first large-scale retrospective of Samia Halaby. Photo: Samia Halaby / Ayyam Gallery
Sharjah Art Museum will host the region's first large-scale retrospective of Samia Halaby. Photo: Samia Halaby / Ayyam Gallery
Sharjah Art Museum will host the region's first large-scale retrospective of Samia Halaby. Photo: Samia Halaby / Ayyam Gallery
Sharjah Art Museum will host the region's first large-scale retrospective of Samia Halaby. Photo: Samia Halaby / Ayyam Gallery

Best art exhibitions to look forward to around the world this autumn


Melissa Gronlund
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As the weather cools and children head back to the classroom, out come the major shows from museums and galleries.

This month and next mark the best time to see art: the back-to-school reflex means smart, exacting shows are on the table as the public often feels recharged and ready to ask some big questions. Of course, children are still welcome visitors.

Here are some of the highlights to keep on your radar.

In the Shade of the Sun, London

Xaytun Ennasr will have work displayed at The Mosaic Rooms this autumn. Photo: Mosaic Rooms
Xaytun Ennasr will have work displayed at The Mosaic Rooms this autumn. Photo: Mosaic Rooms

The stellar programming at London's The Mosaic Rooms continues with collaborations and exhibitions that address the complexities of politics and the aesthetic response to current events.

For its autumn show, it invites three young Palestinian artists, Mona Benyamin, Xaytun Ennasr and Dina Mimi, to showcase works reflecting on the past, present and future. The three work in video, performance, sound and text.

The show was conceived in collaboration with Bilna’es – a commissioning and music platform started by the artists Ruanne Abou-Rahme and Basel Abbas, the musician Muqata’a and others to support cultural production in Palestine.

The exhibition and platform show how developing the infrastructure necessary to make art has itself become a form of art-making in Palestine, as cultural producers in Ramallah and elsewhere turn their attention to the ways works are made and displayed.

Until January 14; The Mosaic Rooms, London

Where to Now? Vienna

Mohammed Kazem in front of his painting, Window (2022), at his Alserkal Avenue studio. Photo: Altamash Urooj
Mohammed Kazem in front of his painting, Window (2022), at his Alserkal Avenue studio. Photo: Altamash Urooj

As part of its "Curated By" strand, when the Krinzinger Schottenfeld gives over its programming to an independent curator, the Vienna space surveys the work of artists from the Gulf and wider region.

Curated by Verena Formanek, who is part of the team at the under-construction Guggenheim Abu Dhabi, the exhibition provides a cross-generational and regional framing of artists, who are understood as parts of separate art genealogies in the Gulf.

Subjects span Abdulnasser Gharem and Ahmed Mater's curatorial formation of the Saudi art scene to Mohammed Kazem, Lamya Gargash and Layla Juma's works as part of the early generations of UAE artists. It also includes younger artists such as Ramin Haerizadeh, Rokni Haerizadeh and Hesam Rahmanian and Radhika Khimji who speak to the Gulf as a place of intersection and exchange.

September 9 to October 14; Krinzinger Schottenfeld, Vienna

Chorus in Rememory of Flight, London

Julianknxx will unveil a multi-screen film installation at his London showcase. Photo: Studioknxx
Julianknxx will unveil a multi-screen film installation at his London showcase. Photo: Studioknxx

Born in Sierre Leone and raised in London, Julianknxx represents identity and legacy as tangled, complex and in motion. Fittingly, he crosses over mediums, both through established forms of expression – film and performance – and the types of expression that go beyond gallery walls, such as music and poetry.

In particular, he questions the legacy of his home country, which was one of the primary exit points for the West African slave trade, and racism that continues in the West today, with violence and discrimination still directed at black people.

This will be his first major solo show in the UK, taking over the Barbican Art Gallery's The Curve. For the commissioned video he travelled to port cities across Europe – those that historically would have traded with Sierra Leone – and invited black choirs in those towns to sing one refrain: “We are what’s left of us."

September 14 to February 11; Barbican Art Gallery, London

Lasting Impressions: Samia Halaby, Sharjah

Samia Halaby's Interpenetrating Transparencies (2017). Photo: Samia Halaby
Samia Halaby's Interpenetrating Transparencies (2017). Photo: Samia Halaby

Sharjah Art Museum is hosting the region's first large-scale retrospective of Samia Halaby. Born in 1936 in Jerusalem, the abstract painter moved to the US in the 1950s. At art school, she came across the American brand of abstraction that was then still dominant and refined this to ask questions about volume and perception.

Her Palestinian identity remained important both to her personally and professionally and she used her draughtsman skills in projects like Drawing the Kafr Qasem Massacre (2016) to document the 1956 event.

Later in her life, her computer projects came to light and her videos formed from coding have entered the public sphere as examples of a confluence between music, colour, technology and verve.

September 21 to January 7, Sharjah Art Museum

Marina Abramovic at Royal Academy of Arts, London

Serbian conceptual and performance artist Marina Abramovic. AFP
Serbian conceptual and performance artist Marina Abramovic. AFP

How do you stage a retrospective of work that is ephemeral, and which requires the artist to be there herself?

Over her decades-long career, Marina Abramovic has challenged art orthodoxy by charging the space with her very presence, so that the encounter becomes about the relationship between the artist and her audience, or between the artist and her collaborators, and the co-dependencies between the two.

For this major show at London's Royal Academy of Arts, Abramovic now challenges norms of retrospectives of performance art – a field she helped establish. The artist has been training younger performers, who will be now taking up her artworks, in a rotating schedule of performances that ensures no two visits to the gallery are the same.

September 23 to January 1; Royal Academy of Arts, London

Talking in Dreams: Ofelia Rodriguez, Bristol

Ofelia Rodriguez's collage Wounded but Undefeated Dream, 1991, draws on flora and fauna from the Caribbean and her own memories. Photo: Spike Island
Ofelia Rodriguez's collage Wounded but Undefeated Dream, 1991, draws on flora and fauna from the Caribbean and her own memories. Photo: Spike Island

This exhibition at the outstanding art space Spike Island in Bristol, south-west England, provides a bittersweet chance to see the work of Ofelia Rodriguez, a Colombian artist who recently died. Her bright, flat paintings bring together a vocabulary of disconnected body parts, tropical motifs and the odd symbol that squarely does not belong – cherubs perching on clouds, or a hand-drawn turtle, perched within a collage.

While she lived in London for most of her adult life, her work often referred to the island of Barranquilla, on the Caribbean coast of Colombia. It examines the stereotypes of island life, but that is too dry a description of the weird and wonderful images and objects she collected and put on display throughout her life.

September 30 to January 14; Spike Island, Bristol

El Anatsui at Tate Modern, London

El Anatsui's Kindred Viewpoints from the 2016 Marrakesh Biennale. Photo: Jens Martin
El Anatsui's Kindred Viewpoints from the 2016 Marrakesh Biennale. Photo: Jens Martin

Where some artists use paint, El Anatsui uses simple bottle caps, stitching together the discarded objects to form long metal mosaics. Patterns reflect and shimmer; folds fall softly onto the ground. It has proved a limitless medium for the renowned Ghanaian sculptor, who also runs an influential studio in Nigeria.

It will be a visual spectacle to look forward to; the high proportions of the Tate Modern's Turbine Hall have flummoxed artists over the years, with many simply scaling up their typical productions. But El Anatsui’s work balances physical impact and intimate scale, with the metal textiles up close telling stories of consumerism, intercontinental trade and the importance of quiet, collective labour.

This could be one of the best installations yet at the London institution.

October 10 to April 14; Tate Modern, London

The Politics of Skin and Movement, London

Amol K Patil's installation The Politics of Skin and Movement will be adapted and expanded at the Hayward Gallery's project space this autumn. Photo: Joseph Rahul
Amol K Patil's installation The Politics of Skin and Movement will be adapted and expanded at the Hayward Gallery's project space this autumn. Photo: Joseph Rahul

Amol K Patil investigates structures of power and how forms of resistance can be passed down along informal channels of communication – such as through families.

This solo show at the Hayward Gallery's Heni Project Space is the first round of a collaboration between the Hayward and Kochi-Muziris Biennale, supported by the Durjoy Bangladesh Foundation. Patil will reprise his installation from last year's Kochi showcase, using drawings, sculptures, kinetic objects and moving images to understand how labour and caste impact the body.

It also carries forward his own family’s tradition of activism: his father was an avant-garde playwright, and his grandfather a poet.

October 11 to November 19; Hayward Gallery, London

Rirkrit Tiravanija: A Lot of People, New York

Rirkrit Tiravanija created a rosewater distillery for Sharjah Biennial 2015, titled Eau de Rose of Damascus. Photo: Rirkrit Tiravanija / Sharjah Art Foundation
Rirkrit Tiravanija created a rosewater distillery for Sharjah Biennial 2015, titled Eau de Rose of Damascus. Photo: Rirkrit Tiravanija / Sharjah Art Foundation

This major retrospective at New York's MoMA offers the chance to look again at the work of Rirkrit Tiravanija, the Thai artist who was a crucial figure in the so-called Relational Aesthetics movement of the 1990s and early 2000s.

In some sense, the movement was sparked by his exhibition at 303 Gallery in 1992, where he served Thai curry to gallery visitors – an idea of art as a way to call together a social public that has become immensely influential since.

This will be one of the first opportunities to revisit the movement three decades on, and to consider Tiravanija as an artist separate from it.

October 12 to March 4; MoMA PS1 Contemporary Art Centre, New York

Guest Relations, Dubai

Hilmi Johandi's My Raffles Experience, 2019. Photo: Collection of Daisuke Miyatsu; Ota Fine Arts Singapore, Shanghai, Tokyo
Hilmi Johandi's My Raffles Experience, 2019. Photo: Collection of Daisuke Miyatsu; Ota Fine Arts Singapore, Shanghai, Tokyo

The follow-up to the Jameel Arts Centre's inaugural exhibition Crude explores the cultural, ecological, social and political ramifications of tourism.

Curator Murtaza Vali looks at how the development of hotels offered neutral public spaces in cities like Dubai, while also ushering in tourists who were unfamiliar with local culture. It also shines a light on how the hospitality industry creates entertainment zones that are both part of and separate from the regular life of the city.

Guest Relations features artists such as Lamya Gargash, Hilmi Johandi, Ahmed Mater, Pio Abad, Michael Rakowitz, Lantian Xie and Ala Younis.

November 4 to April 28; Jameel Arts Centre, Dubai

It Was Just an Accident

Director: Jafar Panahi

Stars: Vahid Mobasseri, Mariam Afshari, Ebrahim Azizi, Hadis Pakbaten, Majid Panahi, Mohamad Ali Elyasmehr

Rating: 4/5

The specs

Engine: 4.0-litre V8

Power: 503hp at 6,000rpm

Torque: 685Nm at 2,000rpm

Transmission: 8-speed auto

Price: from Dh850,000

On sale: now

EA Sports FC 25
Landfill in numbers

• Landfill gas is composed of 50 per cent methane

• Methane is 28 times more harmful than Co2 in terms of global warming

• 11 million total tonnes of waste are being generated annually in Abu Dhabi

• 18,000 tonnes per year of hazardous and medical waste is produced in Abu Dhabi emirate per year

• 20,000 litres of cooking oil produced in Abu Dhabi’s cafeterias and restaurants every day is thrown away

• 50 per cent of Abu Dhabi’s waste is from construction and demolition

Building boom turning to bust as Turkey's economy slows

Deep in a provincial region of northwestern Turkey, it looks like a mirage - hundreds of luxury houses built in neat rows, their pointed towers somewhere between French chateau and Disney castle.

Meant to provide luxurious accommodations for foreign buyers, the houses are however standing empty in what is anything but a fairytale for their investors.

The ambitious development has been hit by regional turmoil as well as the slump in the Turkish construction industry - a key sector - as the country's economy heads towards what could be a hard landing in an intensifying downturn.

After a long period of solid growth, Turkey's economy contracted 1.1 per cent in the third quarter, and many economists expect it will enter into recession this year.

The country has been hit by high inflation and a currency crisis in August. The lira lost 28 per cent of its value against the dollar in 2018 and markets are still unconvinced by the readiness of the government under President Recep Tayyip Erdogan to tackle underlying economic issues.

The villas close to the town centre of Mudurnu in the Bolu region are intended to resemble European architecture and are part of the Sarot Group's Burj Al Babas project.

But the development of 732 villas and a shopping centre - which began in 2014 - is now in limbo as Sarot Group has sought bankruptcy protection.

It is one of hundreds of Turkish companies that have done so as they seek cover from creditors and to restructure their debts.

Wicked: For Good

Director: Jon M Chu

Starring: Ariana Grande, Cynthia Erivo, Jonathan Bailey, Jeff Goldblum, Michelle Yeoh, Ethan Slater

Rating: 4/5

Day 1, Abu Dhabi Test: At a glance

Moment of the day Dimuth Karunaratne had batted with plenty of pluck, and no little skill, in getting to within seven runs of a first-day century. Then, while he ran what he thought was a comfortable single to mid-on, his batting partner Dinesh Chandimal opted to stay at home. The opener was run out by the length of the pitch.

Stat of the day - 1 One six was hit on Day 1. The boundary was only breached 18 times in total over the course of the 90 overs. When it did arrive, the lone six was a thing of beauty, as Niroshan Dickwella effortlessly clipped Mohammed Amir over the square-leg boundary.

The verdict Three wickets down at lunch, on a featherbed wicket having won the toss, and Sri Lanka’s fragile confidence must have been waning. Then Karunaratne and Chandimal's alliance of precisely 100 gave them a foothold in the match. Dickwella’s free-spirited strokeplay meant the Sri Lankans were handily placed at 227 for four at the close.

Updated: September 14, 2023, 1:37 PM