Perhaps more than a hundred people gathered around an ominously large object hidden under a black drape at Ghaf Gallery last night. It was the opening of Under a Thousand Masks, the new exhibition by Jalal Luqman - the local art scene’s wild man.
Since the rest of the gallery was cordoned off, the room quickly filled with guests and press photographers engaging in speculative banter and high-brow gossip. After a well-timed delay, Luqman revealed the centre piece of the show: The Invisible Giant, a sculpture made of welded-together sheaths of metal, towering more than two metres above its audience.
In Luqman’s own words, he wanted it to be a reminder of those who are gifted, but never discovered, forever waiting for their turn in the limelight. Somewhat alien, androgynous and feature-less, the sculpture seems to indicate that genius is easily overlooked, especially if the search for it is bound by conventions.
Under a Thousand Masks is a small, somewhat disconnected show of eight pieces, with the Gentle Giant being the only sculpture. The other works are examples of Luqman’s digital art, many of them are of a dark, nightmarish mood. Inhabited by contorted, scarred and disfigured subjects, his works don’t shirk difficult issues such as addiction, exploitation and oppression and are reminiscent of both Hieronymus Bosch and the eerie yet comical character design in Guillermo del Toro’s film Pan’s Labyrinth.
Luqman goes far in his rebuttal of the more ornamental traditions in Arabic art, but doesn’t negate them. His works are certainly not what you’d expect to find in an average living room in the Middle East - or anywhere else, for that matter. They are too angry, dark and personal to work as decoration - which is exactly what gives them their power.
PS: No, I’m not putting up a snapshot of The Invisible Giant - go check it out yourself! Under a Thousand Masks runs until 30 November 2009 at Ghaf Gallery, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates.
The United Arab Emirates (UAE) don’t do anything halfheartedly. Superlatives and hyperbole have become a second language to those involved in the many record-breaking projects that are underway in the country.
Now the UAE has embraced sustainability and is pumping billions into research and initiatives to advance green technologies.
Abu Dhabi is the epicentre of the UAE’s gigantic green drive, which came as a suprise to many. After all, the UAE are among the world’s leading oil and gas exporters.
But in the last decade the country’s long-term economic strategy has focused on diversification and the cultivation of non-oil dependent industries such as tourism, media, finance and now, sustainable technologies.
Much of this is due to the legacy of the late President His Highness Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan al-Nahyan, who ruled the UAE for more than 30 years and set forth an agenda of religious tolerance, economic reform and protection of the environment.
Masdar City, a living sustainability laboratory currently under construction, is now the centre piece of Abu Dhabi’s environmental strategy. The city will house up to 40,000 residents and employ 50,000 more, but produce no carbon emissions and no waste whatsoever. It will cost US$ 22 billion and is scheduled for completion in 2016. Masdar is the biggest single investment in sustainability to date.
According to Sam Nader of the Masdar Initiative, the project’s aims are „integrating various applications of existing renewable technologies, the cultivation of an innovative academic and business community and the generation of significant intellectual property in order to position Abu Dhabi as a world leader in renewables energy and sustainability.“
Unsurprisingly, the world media have lapped up the story and have bathed the UAE in green limelight.
But some experts have pointed out that initiatives such as Masdar have not yet changed much.
“The numbers must be put into perspective. They are spending welcome billions of dollars on renewables but trillions are still going into climate-changing oil economies. The future is the sun and renewables but there is no time to wait for this revolution,” Tony Juniper, director of Friends of the Earth, told The Guardian.
The 420,000 residents of Abu Dhabi remain among the world’s greatest emittors of greenhouse gases, according to the World Resources Institute.
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