Nadia Saikali and Her Contemporaries is running in Sharjah until July 13. Photo: Maraya Art Centre
Nadia Saikali and Her Contemporaries is running in Sharjah until July 13. Photo: Maraya Art Centre
Nadia Saikali and Her Contemporaries is running in Sharjah until July 13. Photo: Maraya Art Centre
Nadia Saikali and Her Contemporaries is running in Sharjah until July 13. Photo: Maraya Art Centre

Weekly UAE museum and gallery guide: Beirut as a regional hub for modern abstract art and Sharjah Biennial


Razmig Bedirian
  • English
  • Arabic

A slate of new exhibitions and events in the UAE are highlighting cross-cultural connections but in very different ways.

From a show that shares how Lebanon was at a crossroads for abstract artists from across the Arab world to an examination of the poetry of resistance, which reveals how they echo beyond borders and with a universal timbre, here are a few exhibitions to see this week.

Nadia Saikali and Her Contemporaries at Maraya Art Centre

Nadia Saikali, Empreinte Autoportrait, 1986. Photo: Barjeel Art Foundation
Nadia Saikali, Empreinte Autoportrait, 1986. Photo: Barjeel Art Foundation

A pioneering figure of abstract art in the region, Nadia Saikali’s spotlight is perhaps long overdue. The Lebanese artist’s work ranges across a variety of mediums and styles, despite them often veering towards abstraction.

From her early gestural work to the line-based paintings and sprawling landscape canvases in the later stages of her career, Saikali’s work is at the heart of a new show at Sharjah’s Maraya Art Centre. Yet, the exhibition – co-organised with the Barjeel Art Foundation – opens up to feature works by her contemporaries, all of whom are women.

The artists come from across the Arab world, but they all spent time reducing work in Beirut during the 1960s and 1970s. As such, Beirut becomes the star of the exhibition, showing how the city was a regional hub for artists.

Saturday to Thursday, 10am-7pm; Friday, 4pm-7pm; until July 13; Maraya Art Centre, Sharjah

Shilpa Gupta: Lines of Flight at Ishara Art Foundation

A piece from Shilpa Gupta's Untitled (Jailed Poet Drawings). Photo: Ishara Art Foundation
A piece from Shilpa Gupta's Untitled (Jailed Poet Drawings). Photo: Ishara Art Foundation

Shilpa Gupta’s first solo exhibition in the Middle East is being held at the Ishara Art Foundation. The exhibition presents a large body of work, produced since 2006. The artworks, though ranging in medium, all have a central preoccupation in that they challenge the notions of border, terrestrial and political.

Some drawings highlight works by poets from around the world who faced persecution, showing how their writings transcended demarcations. A room-filled installation, titled Listening Air, meanwhile, features songs of resistance, emanating from microphones that move across the space.

Monday to Saturday, 10am-7pm; until May 31; Ishara Art Foundation, Dubai

Vertical Horizon / 361 Degrees at Inloco Gallery

Karim Jabbari drew inspiration from his father's poetry collection for the works he created as part of his Dubai residency. Photo: Inloco Gallery
Karim Jabbari drew inspiration from his father's poetry collection for the works he created as part of his Dubai residency. Photo: Inloco Gallery

Tunisian artist Karim Jabbari, whose practice involves light and calligraphy, is presenting a solo exhibition at Inloco Gallery. The pieces, created as part of his residency in Dubai, examine the importance of tradition in a contemporary world.

The works show how poetry is a starting point for Jabbari’s art as well. Several calligraphic pieces take cues from the Arabic poetry that Jabbari found in his father’s library. The exhibition also features documentation of his light calligraphy pieces, showing how the artist engages with disparate traditions and cultures to create something idiosyncratic.

The exhibition comes as part of Inloco Gallery's third season and includes an art intervention in Satwa, as well as performances by Jabbari and Emirati artist Khalil Abdulwahid.

Monday to Wednesday, noon-7pm; Thursday to Friday, noon-8pm; Inloco Gallery, Dubai

Sharjah Biennial

From left, the biennial's curators are Natasha Ginwala, Amal Khalaf, Zeynep Oz, Alia Swastika and Megan Tamati-Quennell. Photo: Sharjah Art Foundation
From left, the biennial's curators are Natasha Ginwala, Amal Khalaf, Zeynep Oz, Alia Swastika and Megan Tamati-Quennell. Photo: Sharjah Art Foundation

Sharjah’s prestigious art event is back. It is showcasing 650 works by almost 200 artists, including 200 commissioned works. The biennial will be taking place under the title "To Carry", reflecting the memories and traditions we individually carry with us. The event is running across 17 venues in Sharjah, including locations in Al Hamriyah, Al Dhaid and Kalba.

The event opens on Thursday and will be running until June 15. It is curated by Alia Swastika, Amal Khalaf, Megan Tamati-Quennell, Natasha Ginwala and Zeynep Oz.

The biennial is running in several locations across Sharjah. More information at sharjahart.org

Can NRIs vote in the election?

Indians residing overseas cannot cast their ballot abroad

Non-resident Indians or NRIs can vote only by going to a polling booth in their home constituency

There are about 3.1 million NRIs living overseas

Indians have urged political parties to extend the right to vote to citizens residing overseas

A committee of the Election Commission of India approved of proxy voting for non-resident Indians

Proxy voting means that a person can authorise someone residing in the same polling booth area to cast a vote on his behalf.

This option is currently available for the armed forces, police and government officials posted outside India

A bill was passed in the lower house of India’s parliament or the Lok Sabha to extend proxy voting to non-resident Indians

However, this did not come before the upper house or Rajya Sabha and has lapsed

The issue of NRI voting draws a huge amount of interest in India and overseas

Over the past few months, Indians have received messages on mobile phones and on social media claiming that NRIs can cast their votes online

The Election Commission of India then clarified that NRIs could not vote online

The Election Commission lodged a complaint with the Delhi Police asking it to clamp down on the people spreading misinformation

Updated: February 07, 2025, 5:01 AM