"The project's stated aims are shrewdly simple: it just sets out to enable Americans to meet people who actually come from (or have been to) the place that their country has invaded."
"The project's stated aims are shrewdly simple: it just sets out to enable Americans to meet people who actually come from (or have been to) the place that their country has invaded."

Conversation piece



Benjamin Tiven considers Jeremy Deller's moving installation about the Iraq war, It Is What It Is. On March 5, 2007, a suicide bomber exploded an automobile in the middle of al Mutanabbi Street, the historic centre of Baghdad's book trade, killing 38 people and wounding hundreds of others. Last month the rusted, twisting steel husk of that car went on display in an otherwise sparse gallery at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago. News photographs of the chaotic street scene that ensued were hung on an adjacent wall, next to maps and explanatory texts.

In the centre of the room, plush couches were arranged as if in a living room, with a carpet and a small table, at which a few museum visitors talked quietly, sipping black tea and snacking on sesame cookies - a jarring combination of the domestically welcoming and the violently depraved. Most people, upon entering the gallery, were magnetically drawn to the car; a few wound their way over to the couches, sat down, and joined the ongoing conversation.

Esam Pasha, an Iraqi painter who had worked as a translator for the coalition forces, jovially shared memories of growing up in Baghdad and described the first months after the American invasion. Sitting nearby, Dr Donny George Youkhanna, the former director of the Iraqi National Museum, regaled visitors with sad, sometimes bleakly funny stories of the global black market in antiquities. This room - its calm and inviting furniture, automobile corpse, talkative Iraqi experts, and the conversations engendered by the combination of all these - was the last iteration of a sprawling work by the British artist Jeremy Deller called It Is What It Is: Conversations About Iraq. During its three different museum installations, in New York, Los Angeles and Chicago, a group of invited specialists - scholars, journalists, exiles, soldiers and artists; mostly Iraqis, with some Americans - came on a rotating schedule to sit on the couches and talk to anyone who showed up.

Holding to a neutral and factual register, the piece makes concrete what the American consciousness has persistently abstracted: the victims, consequences, causes and goals of the war, as well as the history and culture of Iraq itself. In a statement that accompanies the piece, Deller expressed its purpose like so: "Firsthand accounts [of Iraq] are few and far between. I have read a ton of books and articles about the war, but short of going to Iraq itself, there is no substitute for meeting someone who has actually lived there, or been there, hence the core part of this project."

Youkhanna, the former Iraqi museum director, also participated in the exhibition's first installation, in March at the New Museum in New York. "I found it amazing," he said, as a museum attendant in Chicago poured him some more tea. "It's an extraordinary exhibition. The idea is that when you walk in here you don't see that much. But then, little by little, you feel the exhibition. This is something different, based on dialogue between people. It's a live exhibition, where you give and take. I believe this is something unique."

Between the exhibitions in New York and Los Angeles, Deller took the show on the road. He put the bombed-out car on a trailer with a sign that said "This car was destroyed by a bomb in a Baghdad marketplace on March 5, 2007", hitched the trailer to the back of an RV, and drove across the southern United States for three weeks, along with Pasha (the Iraqi painter), a former US Army platoon sergeant named Jonathan Harvey (who served in 2007 in northwest Baghdad), and the curator Nato Thompson.

This iteration of the project stopped in various towns, cities, college campuses and rural locales between the coasts: the group would park in a prominent spot, set up some tables with literature, and attempt to engage whomever they could in an open discourse about the war, using the burnt-out car as a provocative conversation-starter. Pasha and Harvey did most of the talking, as they were the relevant experts; Deller and Thompson usually stayed quiet, or tried to.

"We presented this in a very bland way," Deller said after the trip. "We didn't make it an anti-war piece, and we certainly didn't make it a pro-war piece, and because of that a lot of people in the anti-war movement got annoyed with us, because they expected something a lot more polemical. But I realised, and Nato realised, that that would just shut down any discussion and scare people off." The trip was documented on the project's website, and the video clips presented there reveal the astonishing diversity of opinions and ideas across a full spectrum of American society, from the parents and relatives of soldiers to veterans themselves, Iraqi immigrants to college students, farmers to tattoo artists. Some played precisely to stereotype, clinging to ill-informed conceptions of the war shaped by popular media or religious belief (that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction, or was using them to threaten Israel). Others upended any preconceptions, revealing a more complex relationship between America and the Arab world - like the blonde cheerleader in Houston who explains that her family, which is in the oil business, has expanded to include various Muslim aunts and uncles by marriage.

Talking about the war in Iraq proved every bit the elaborate rabbit hole Deller had imagined. The simple act of conversing about Iraq, it turns out, revealed fraught relationships, galvanised politics and some fuzzy historical logic - as well as a great deal of suffering and some genuine empathy for the suffering of others. Thompson often warned people: "Listen, just so you know, this project is going to look like its boring. But if you go and listen to what's happening, its actually totally crazy and amazing. Because conversation doesn't look like that much on film."

It is hard to draw any specific conclusions from the sum of these conversations, but what is clear is the vast disjunct in the popular consciousness between the clarity of the war as a violent disaster and the cloudiness of its moral, ethical and legal underpinnings. Everyone can agree that war is horrible; no one can agree on exactly why or whether we needed to start one, or how it ought to end. In some sense, the elliptical nature of the piece reflects the nature of the war itself, and all the logical cul-de-sacs that explain its origins and justify its perpetuation.

At a schoolyard in Memphis, Pasha was stumped by a child's innocent question: "How did the war start?" "I don't know," he laughed, and explained that one day the tanks and planes just showed up. "It's like living inside a video game, except you can actually smell the smoke." He tried his best to smile for the kids. Deller took his title - "It is what it is" - from Sergeant Harvey, who once explained to him the exasperated conclusion, common among his Army colleagues, that some greater, unmovable inevitability must be at work in situations so bereft of moral or political clarity. And though the oblique neutrality of the title was a key position to maintain (and Deller has elsewhere noted that it was way too late in the conflict for a gesture of protest anyway), one can't help but see some rueful criticism reflected in its absurd tautology. How can things really just "be" what they "are" in a war zone?

Many of Deller's projects deal with politicised historical events, and almost all of them involve the participation of others. He has exhibited a survey of British folk art, hired a traditional English brass band to play Acid House compositions, and most famously, produced a full-scale re-enactment of the Battle of Orgreave, a key clash in the British miners' strike of 1984. That work included the participation of numerous former miners who had been in the original conflict, essentially recast as their younger selves.

But whereas his earlier works re-enacted historical incidents or cultural memories, It Is What It Is is an enactment: it attempts to render the abstraction of a current, unresolved violence, and of a foreign culture, into something present and real. The subject here isn't the war itself, but its continuing unknowability, the way that it has eluded our attempts to apprehend and describe it. Because his work is usually ephemeral and participatory, and because he rarely produces material objects, Deller has sometimes been criticised by those who say that what he does is "not really art". Complaints of this sort overlook the long genealogy of participatory work from which Deller emerges, but they may also miss the point. Tricia Van Eck, the curator at the Chicago Museum of Contemporary Art, sees the "situation" Deller has created in the gallery, the possibility for conversations to occur, as the art, though she concedes that Deller himself might describe it differently. For his part, the mildly laconic artist has said, "I try to make art about things I'm interested in, in a way that I think is relevant."

In any case, the project's stated aims are shrewdly simple: it just sets out to enable Americans to meet people who actually come from (or have been to) the place that their country has invaded. It focuses on a vacuum in the public discourse, but it also acts on that vacuum by providing material that can fill it. Of course, the limits of the work are defined by its participants: if the invited guests are ill-informed or poor conversationalists, then on that day the work suffers, just as it does on days when few visitors show up or engage the guests. Most of the people who came into the gallery when I saw the piece in Chicago walked first to the car, took photographs, and then stood around, awkwardly, listening to the conversation - perhaps not realising that they were supposed to sit down, join in and help to shape it. That's the gamble of Deller's strategy: if you invest in the conversation, you can reap profound rewards of understanding. But if not, the whole project might very simply pass you by.

At the museum in Chicago, I asked Youkhanna if he saw any historical precedents for an art project like this one. His answer began with memories of contemporary Baghdad. "I tell you one thing," he said. "I was always fascinated by Shar al Mutanabbi. The street was a special street: I would call it a kind of temple for every educated man or woman in Baghdad. Most of the time I would have in mind one book to go and find there, but I ended up with loads of 10 or 20 books every time!"

Even before he got to explaining the civic function of ancient cuneiform tablets, he had revealed the depth of It Is What It Is. As I listened to Youkhanna describe the lost centre of intellectual life in Baghdad, I was struck by the fact that the rusting, wrecked car at the back of the gallery, which destroyed the bookstalls on al Mutanabbi Street, had now become an instrument to rekindle, very far away, a new version of the open, unmediated exchange of knowledge that once flourished there.

Benjamin Tiven is an artist living in New York.

COMPANY PROFILE
Name: Kumulus Water
 
Started: 2021
 
Founders: Iheb Triki and Mohamed Ali Abid
 
Based: Tunisia 
 
Sector: Water technology 
 
Number of staff: 22 
 
Investment raised: $4 million 
At a glance

Global events: Much of the UK’s economic woes were blamed on “increased global uncertainty”, which can be interpreted as the economic impact of the Ukraine war and the uncertainty over Donald Trump’s tariffs.

 

Growth forecasts: Cut for 2025 from 2 per cent to 1 per cent. The OBR watchdog also estimated inflation will average 3.2 per cent this year

 

Welfare: Universal credit health element cut by 50 per cent and frozen for new claimants, building on cuts to the disability and incapacity bill set out earlier this month

 

Spending cuts: Overall day-to day-spending across government cut by £6.1bn in 2029-30 

 

Tax evasion: Steps to crack down on tax evasion to raise “£6.5bn per year” for the public purse

 

Defence: New high-tech weaponry, upgrading HM Naval Base in Portsmouth

 

Housing: Housebuilding to reach its highest in 40 years, with planning reforms helping generate an extra £3.4bn for public finances

The specs
Engine: 4.0-litre flat-six
Power: 510hp at 9,000rpm
Torque: 450Nm at 6,100rpm
Transmission: 7-speed PDK auto or 6-speed manual
Fuel economy, combined: 13.8L/100km
On sale: Available to order now
Price: From Dh801,800
Specs

Engine: 51.5kW electric motor

Range: 400km

Power: 134bhp

Torque: 175Nm

Price: From Dh98,800

Available: Now

Mia Man’s tips for fermentation

- Start with a simple recipe such as yogurt or sauerkraut

- Keep your hands and kitchen tools clean. Sanitize knives, cutting boards, tongs and storage jars with boiling water before you start.

- Mold is bad: the colour pink is a sign of mold. If yogurt turns pink as it ferments, you need to discard it and start again. For kraut, if you remove the top leaves and see any sign of mold, you should discard the batch.

- Always use clean, closed, airtight lids and containers such as mason jars when fermenting yogurt and kraut. Keep the lid closed to prevent insects and contaminants from getting in.

 

Stage result

1. Jasper Philipsen (Bel) Alpecin-Fenix 4:42:34

2. Sam Bennett (Irl) Bora-Hansgrohe

3. Elia Viviani (Ita) Ineos Grenadiers

4. Dylan Groenewegen (Ned) BikeExchange-Jayco

5. Emils Liepins (Lat) Trek-Segafredo

6. Arnaud Demare (Fra) Groupama-FDJ

7. Max Kanter (Ger) Movistar Team

8. Olav Kooij (Ned) Jumbo-Visma

9. Tom Devriendt (Bel) Intermarché-Wanty-Gobert Matériaux

10. Pascal Ackermann (Ger) UAE Team Emirate

The National's picks

4.35pm: Tilal Al Khalediah
5.10pm: Continous
5.45pm: Raging Torrent
6.20pm: West Acre
7pm: Flood Zone
7.40pm: Straight No Chaser
8.15pm: Romantic Warrior
8.50pm: Calandogan
9.30pm: Forever Young

Real estate tokenisation project

Dubai launched the pilot phase of its real estate tokenisation project last month.

The initiative focuses on converting real estate assets into digital tokens recorded on blockchain technology and helps in streamlining the process of buying, selling and investing, the Dubai Land Department said.

Dubai’s real estate tokenisation market is projected to reach Dh60 billion ($16.33 billion) by 2033, representing 7 per cent of the emirate’s total property transactions, according to the DLD.

Key facilities
  • Olympic-size swimming pool with a split bulkhead for multi-use configurations, including water polo and 50m/25m training lanes
  • Premier League-standard football pitch
  • 400m Olympic running track
  • NBA-spec basketball court with auditorium
  • 600-seat auditorium
  • Spaces for historical and cultural exploration
  • An elevated football field that doubles as a helipad
  • Specialist robotics and science laboratories
  • AR and VR-enabled learning centres
  • Disruption Lab and Research Centre for developing entrepreneurial skills
Formula Middle East Calendar (Formula Regional and Formula 4)
Round 1: January 17-19, Yas Marina Circuit – Abu Dhabi
 
Round 2: January 22-23, Yas Marina Circuit – Abu Dhabi
 
Round 3: February 7-9, Dubai Autodrome – Dubai
 
Round 4: February 14-16, Yas Marina Circuit – Abu Dhabi
 
Round 5: February 25-27, Jeddah Corniche Circuit – Saudi Arabia

Mercer, the investment consulting arm of US services company Marsh & McLennan, expects its wealth division to at least double its assets under management (AUM) in the Middle East as wealth in the region continues to grow despite economic headwinds, a company official said.

Mercer Wealth, which globally has $160 billion in AUM, plans to boost its AUM in the region to $2-$3bn in the next 2-3 years from the present $1bn, said Yasir AbuShaban, a Dubai-based principal with Mercer Wealth.

Within the next two to three years, we are looking at reaching $2 to $3 billion as a conservative estimate and we do see an opportunity to do so,” said Mr AbuShaban.

Mercer does not directly make investments, but allocates clients’ money they have discretion to, to professional asset managers. They also provide advice to clients.

“We have buying power. We can negotiate on their (client’s) behalf with asset managers to provide them lower fees than they otherwise would have to get on their own,” he added.

Mercer Wealth’s clients include sovereign wealth funds, family offices, and insurance companies among others.

From its office in Dubai, Mercer also looks after Africa, India and Turkey, where they also see opportunity for growth.

Wealth creation in Middle East and Africa (MEA) grew 8.5 per cent to $8.1 trillion last year from $7.5tn in 2015, higher than last year’s global average of 6 per cent and the second-highest growth in a region after Asia-Pacific which grew 9.9 per cent, according to consultancy Boston Consulting Group (BCG). In the region, where wealth grew just 1.9 per cent in 2015 compared with 2014, a pickup in oil prices has helped in wealth generation.

BCG is forecasting MEA wealth will rise to $12tn by 2021, growing at an annual average of 8 per cent.

Drivers of wealth generation in the region will be split evenly between new wealth creation and growth of performance of existing assets, according to BCG.

Another general trend in the region is clients’ looking for a comprehensive approach to investing, according to Mr AbuShaban.

“Institutional investors or some of the families are seeing a slowdown in the available capital they have to invest and in that sense they are looking at optimizing the way they manage their portfolios and making sure they are not investing haphazardly and different parts of their investment are working together,” said Mr AbuShaban.

Some clients also have a higher appetite for risk, given the low interest-rate environment that does not provide enough yield for some institutional investors. These clients are keen to invest in illiquid assets, such as private equity and infrastructure.

“What we have seen is a desire for higher returns in what has been a low-return environment specifically in various fixed income or bonds,” he said.

“In this environment, we have seen a de facto increase in the risk that clients are taking in things like illiquid investments, private equity investments, infrastructure and private debt, those kind of investments were higher illiquidity results in incrementally higher returns.”

The Abu Dhabi Investment Authority, one of the largest sovereign wealth funds, said in its 2016 report that has gradually increased its exposure in direct private equity and private credit transactions, mainly in Asian markets and especially in China and India. The authority’s private equity department focused on structured equities owing to “their defensive characteristics.”

A MINECRAFT MOVIE

Director: Jared Hess

Starring: Jack Black, Jennifer Coolidge, Jason Momoa

Rating: 3/5

3%20Body%20Problem
%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3ECreators%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%20David%20Benioff%2C%20D%20B%20Weiss%2C%20Alexander%20Woo%3C%2Fp%3E%0A%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3EStarring%3A%20%3C%2Fstrong%3EBenedict%20Wong%2C%20Jess%20Hong%2C%20Jovan%20Adepo%2C%20Eiza%20Gonzalez%2C%20John%20Bradley%2C%20Alex%20Sharp%3C%2Fp%3E%0A%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3ERating%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%203%2F5%3C%2Fp%3E%0A
History's medical milestones

1799 - First small pox vaccine administered

1846 - First public demonstration of anaesthesia in surgery

1861 - Louis Pasteur published his germ theory which proved that bacteria caused diseases

1895 - Discovery of x-rays

1923 - Heart valve surgery performed successfully for first time

1928 - Alexander Fleming discovers penicillin

1953 - Structure of DNA discovered

1952 - First organ transplant - a kidney - takes place 

1954 - Clinical trials of birth control pill

1979 - MRI, or magnetic resonance imaging, scanned used to diagnose illness and injury.

1998 - The first adult live-donor liver transplant is carried out

The smuggler

Eldarir had arrived at JFK in January 2020 with three suitcases, containing goods he valued at $300, when he was directed to a search area.
Officers found 41 gold artefacts among the bags, including amulets from a funerary set which prepared the deceased for the afterlife.
Also found was a cartouche of a Ptolemaic king on a relief that was originally part of a royal building or temple. 
The largest single group of items found in Eldarir’s cases were 400 shabtis, or figurines.

Khouli conviction

Khouli smuggled items into the US by making false declarations to customs about the country of origin and value of the items.
According to Immigration and Customs Enforcement, he provided “false provenances which stated that [two] Egyptian antiquities were part of a collection assembled by Khouli's father in Israel in the 1960s” when in fact “Khouli acquired the Egyptian antiquities from other dealers”.
He was sentenced to one year of probation, six months of home confinement and 200 hours of community service in 2012 after admitting buying and smuggling Egyptian antiquities, including coffins, funerary boats and limestone figures.

For sale

A number of other items said to come from the collection of Ezeldeen Taha Eldarir are currently or recently for sale.
Their provenance is described in near identical terms as the British Museum shabti: bought from Salahaddin Sirmali, "authenticated and appraised" by Hossen Rashed, then imported to the US in 1948.

- An Egyptian Mummy mask dating from 700BC-30BC, is on offer for £11,807 ($15,275) online by a seller in Mexico

- A coffin lid dating back to 664BC-332BC was offered for sale by a Colorado-based art dealer, with a starting price of $65,000

- A shabti that was on sale through a Chicago-based coin dealer, dating from 1567BC-1085BC, is up for $1,950