DUBAI: Over the two decades since its establishment in Dubai in 2005, The Third Line gallery has established itself as one of the leading supporters, promoters and exhibitors of contemporary art in the Middle East. Its upcoming exhibition, “The Only Way Out Is Through: The Twentieth Line” celebrates the gallery’s 20th anniversary with a show of selected works from the artists it represents arranged in four chronological sections. The exhibition, according to the press release, “invites visitors to time travel — through the many trajectories of contemporary art from the region over the past two decades, but also through the crises that have shadowed it — and reflect on the complexities and contradictions that make up the early 21st century.” Here, we present a few highlights from the show, which runs from Sept. 18 to Nov. 7.
Farhad Moshiri
‘Rodeo Cowboy’
This piece from the Iranian conceptual artist — who died last year — was originally part of his “Close-Up” solo exhibition, which consisted of works that employed Moshiri’s “signature technique of hand-embroidering beads to form reproductions of photographs,” the gallery states. “The imagery moves between the real and the imagined, and … continues to provide a critical commentary on the East-West dichotomy, which is ever present in the artist’s practice.” The pearl beads used to compose “Rodeo Cowboy” give the work “a dreamlike quality,” the show catalogue continues. “Much like the dot-matrix printing of … comic books — a recurring reference in pop art — Moshiri’s technique transforms the everyday image into something tactile and poetic.” And, like much of his work, it juxtaposes modern Western disposable pop culture with the ancient, and time-consuming, craftsmanship of Moshiri’s homeland.
Farhad Moshiri's 'Rodeo Cowboy' (2018). (Supplied)
Farah Al-Qasimi
‘Changing Room’
The New York-based Emirati artist and musician is best known for her colorful, vibrant photography such as this piece from 2019, which, according to The Third Line, “reflects Al-Qasimi’s exploration of Arab-American culture from within, addressing questions of home, belonging, assimilation, and cultural difference.” The show catalogue continues: “Through intimate moments that weave together Arab and Western aesthetics, Al-Qasimi examines the tension of gendered and religious norms in Arab-American culture … revealing how identity is constantly negotiated, performed, and reimagined.”
Farah Al Qasimi's 'Changing Room' (2019). (Supplied)
Jordan Nassar
‘By The Flux’
The work of this US artist, who has part-Palestinian heritage, is inspired by the ancient Palestinian embroidery craft of tatreez. He adapts its geometric patterns to examine “conflicting issues of identity and cultural participation,” according to the gallery, which adds: “Nassar’s textile works operate between representational and geometric abstraction, often including fictive landscapes of Palestine.” Nassar describes these landscapes as being “versions of Palestine as they exist in the minds of the diaspora, who have never been there and may never be able to go there. They are dreamlands and utopias that are colorful and fantastic — beautiful and romantic, but bittersweet.”
Bady Dalloul
‘One Man Show’
Collage is a key part of the French-Syrian artist’s practice, which also uses drawing and video “to explore the intersections of history, memory, and fiction,” the gallery states. “Dalloul frequently examines themes of heritage, displacement, and global migration, using poetic and subversive strategies to reflect on the construction of personal and collective memory.” This playful piece from 2024 was inspired specifically by Dubai’s Bur Dubai neighborhood, and depicts “the daily challenges and pleasures awaiting (its inhabitants), engaging in ordinary acts of raising children, staying healthy, and finding love, while staying positive.”
Bady Dalloul's 'One Man Show' (2024). (Supplied)
Lamya Gargash
‘Majlis Series (Light Door)’
This 2009 piece comes from the Emirati artist’s eponymous series of photographs focused on the rooms in Khaleeji households where people gather to socialize. “Today, the spaces reflect a blend of traditional and contemporary elements, as people decorate them according to their stylistic preferences,” the gallery states. “Exploring modernity, mortality, identity and the banal, Gargash captures the beauty of human trace and the value of the mundane through photography.”
Lamya Gargash's 'Majlis Series (Light Door)' (2009). (Supplied)
Sarah Awad
‘Third Eye’
The Levantine-Arab painter told Arab News in 2022 that she does not have “a categorization” for her artistic style, and described painting as “both a joy and a gift, and also a source of tension … To make a great painting, you have to experience not knowing.” This work — created that same year — is from a series that, The Third Line states, “explores notions of space, color, and the act of looking. … While devoid of explicit narrative, the works resonate through gesture, body, and color, and are conceived as deliberately open-ended in their interpretation.”
Sarah Awad's 'Third Eye' (2022). (Supplied)