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December 2009

The Refugee-Industrial Complex: the QIZ in Jordan

An interview with Oroub el-Abed

In 2001, the U.S. established several Qualified Industrial Zones (QIZ) in Jordan and Egypt, where labor-intensive products (such as textiles and garments), were manufactured for tax-free export to the U.S. under specific conditions. The industries drew many young women into the workforce who had never been involved in paid labor before. Researcher Oroub El-Abed conducted a field research in the north of Jordan where she interviewed women working in Al-Hassan Industrial Zone near Irbid and living in either rural villages or refugee camps in the area, about how their lives has changed in the process.


The Serving Line at Q-West

Text and videos by Lee Wang

In order to maintain the war in Iraq, U.S. military bases have been transformed into fortified mini-Americas that serve the comforts of coffee and fast food to soldiers on endless deployment. Filmmaker Lee Wang recounts her experiences with the military's new service economy during a trip to Iraq in 2006.



X-Mission

Video and text by Ursula Biemann

The refugee camp encapsulates crucial features of our political planet – refugees are suspended from political rights and placed under quarantine in the political regime of nation states. In that regard, the refugee camp is above all, a capsule. A capsule where populations are suspended from the legal order that governs their lives, defined and regulated according to the United Nations’ humanitarian conventions and the volatile domain of international politics.

Monologues on Air: 17 notes on the project
'Can U See Me: Monologues in Air',
Oraib Toukan, 2009

Documentation of a temporary intervention on rooftops in downtown Amman that face the Citadel and Marka military airport. The work was installed on ten commercial buildings.  The arrows could be seen from the city’s many elevations that overlook downtown Amman. The orange vinyl was the same material used to insulate rooftops and mark truce targets in times of war. From afar the arrows run in different directions depicting an almost haphazard schema. The direction and placement of each arrow depended on the architecture of each building. The buildings chosen in turn depended on attaining permission from non-classified 1960’s-70’s real-estate owner, and on big-brother buy in to the project. Reactions varied from pedestrian cellular phone picture-taking using it as a backdrop, to conversations among pedestrians and shop owners on big brother, Google Earth, and war game theories.  ‘Can u see me..’, was produced by YATF during Meeting Points 07, and was curated by Ola Al Khalidi and Samah Hijawi.

ArtParis-Abu Dhabi Back for Second Year

By Alma Kadragic

It’s not new that Abu Dhabi is working on becoming the cultural capital of the Middle East.  Another sign of that is the return of ArtParis-Abu Dhabi for the second year, bigger and organizers say better than last time with 57 galleries from around the world exhibiting more than 3300 works of art.

At the Crossroads
The Arts in the United Arab Emirates: Abu Dhabi and Dubai


Guest Editor: Sharon LaVon Parker

Art is poised at the crossroads in the United Arab Emirates, particularly in Abu Dhabi.  Abu Dhabi, the important political hub of the Emirates, has arrived at the contemporary art scene very recently, unlike Dubai, with its history of involvement with exhibition spaces and setting for important auctions of Middle Eastern art, or Sharjah, site for the Sharjah Biennale that greatly expanded its offerings under the direction of Sheikha Hoor Al Qasimi, daughter of the ruler of Sharjah.

At the Crossroads

The Arts in the United Arab Emirates: Abu Dhabi and Dubai

Guest Editor: Sharon LaVon Parker

Art is poised at the crossroads in the United Arab Emirates, particularly in Abu Dhabi.  Abu Dhabi, the important political hub of the Emirates, has arrived at the contemporary art scene very recently, unlike Dubai, with its history of involvement with exhibition spaces and setting for important auctions of Middle Eastern art, or Sharjah, site for the Sharjah Biennale that greatly expanded its offerings under the direction of Sheikha Hoor Al Qasimi, daughter of the ruler of Sharjah.

Contemporary Iranian Art in Dubai

By Sharon LaVon Parker

Iranian art does well in the UAE – especially in Dubai where exhibitions of contemporary Iranian art can be found in a number of galleries including several located in the Al Quoz industrial area close to Sheikh Zayed Road. The work of some artists, such as the calligraphic paintings of Mohammad Ehsai and the sculptures of Parviz Tanavoli, commanded significant sums at Christie’s Auction in Dubai in the spring 2008 auction.(1)

Critical Issues in the Development of Printmaking and Young Emirati Female Artists

By Karen Oremus

The United Arab Emirates (UAE) has only been established as a country for 36 years, and to date has had a very short and modest history in the visual arts, art education and art appreciation. Printmaking, which is a relatively new medium in the UAE, is not widely practiced. The few printmaking studios in the country are situated within a small number of institutes of higher learning in Abu Dhabi, Dubai and Sharjah. Because there are no private or public print shops artists can access once they have graduated from university, the expansion of this medium is adversely affected. 

Ever Changing Fusion: A Snapshot of Emerging Emirati Women Artists

By Janet Bellotto

Young artists in the UAE have witnessed a continual change in landscape and culture in what is an apparent fusion of east and west. Photography is the tool of choice for many young artists whose main circuit of communication is though the virtual conduits of the Internet. Instantly they can cross borders and communicate with others across the globe.

In the Pursuit of a Commercial Art Scene - Abu Dhabi and Dubai

By Emily Doherty

2007 was a monumental year for art – and indeed, all things cultural – in Abu Dhabi. In a short space of time, the city has seen real progress in terms of cultural maturity. The Saadiyat Island project – complete with Louvre and Guggenheim museums - was announced to the world in February; the Tourism Development Investment Company (TDIC) created a dedicated exhibition space within the Emirates Palace hotel organising such prolific exhibitions as the Arts of Islam – Treasures from the Khalili Collection; three contemporary galleries, Ghaf Gallery, Al Qibab Gallery and Contempo Art Gallery, welcomed audiences for the first time; the Abu Dhabi Authority for Culture and Heritage (ADACH) brought heavyweight archaeological and anthropological exhibitions such as the British Museum’s Sudan, to the halls of the Cultural Foundation and, Art Paris-Abu Dhabi held a successful, glamorous inaugural edition in November. The city’s cultural calendar was increased ten-fold. However, is it also valid to look at Abu Dhabi one year on and question why there isn’t yet a contemporary commercial art scene to match the very one which has been blossoming, not so quietly, up the Sheikh Zayed road for the past three years?

Interview with Ayyub bin Russell Hamilton, Associate Professor, Art and Design, Zayed University, Abu Dhabi, UAE

By Sharon LaVon Parker

Ayyub bin Russell Hamilton constructs complicated landscapes which are comprised of a multitude of images from photographs taken throughout the United Arab Emirates – from Abu Dhabi to Ras al-Khaimah; Dubai and Sharjah to Umm al-Qaiwain and all the points in between.

Interview with Hoda Kanoo, Founder of Abu Dhabi Music and Arts Foundation and the Annual Classical Music Festival

By Alma Kadragic

Last year you created the Young Press Leaders Program (YPL) which has been extended and expanded into 2009. Why did you start it?

To give national students the opportunity to interact with professional journalists and to focus their creativity in producing something special. It is a platform in which they can voice their opinions.

Introduction to the Poetry of Young Emirati Female Students at Zayed University Abu Dhabi

By Lisa Isaacson

For a recent requirement to recite and discuss with me in my office a poem from a long list of choices, several poetry students chose Robert Graves’ “The Cool Web.” In that poem, the speaker traces how the filaments of “speech” and “spell” weave patterns of thought that both order the chaos of experience and diminish it.  Acknowledging that language offers both retreat from the world of human activity and fortification of one’s home in that land, Graves’ speaker accepts the double bind of language.

Layla Bahussain's Shadows

By Sharon LaVon Parker

Layla Bahussain's series, Shadows results from her questions about the way in which Emirati women, when clothed in the traditional abaya, may be perceived by others.  Are they seen as oddities or exotic beings by tourists unfamiliar with the local culture simply because of what they are wearing?  Shadows is a playful exploration of the relationship of form to shadow with perception and misperception.

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