Overview

Belonging

The Sharjah Biennial 7 addresses the rapid developments marking the region, but also raises the question of intersecting artistic traditions, and of partaking in “Globalised” art events. The Biennial is hosting over 70 artists and inviting biennial glitterati, local citizens and the vast expatriate community to consider the now vaporous landscapes of our professional, cultural and sociopolitical habitats. The very choice of the theme “Belonging” raises the question of what it means to endorse internationalised art practices outside the established, traditional centers of the arts. To which point must the event transcend local prerogatives, and in which way can it uphold its specificity without looking helpless or folkloric?

Artists

Joumana Abboud, Ebtisam Abdulaziz, Tarek Al Ghoussein, Leyla Al Mutannakker, Terry Atkinson, Maja Bajevic, Ursula Biemann, Luchezar Boyadjiev, Sonia Boyce, Christoph Buchel & Giovanni Carmine, Miguel Calderon, Phil Collins, Com & Com, Claude Closky, Minerva Cuevas, Zeyad Dajani, Pio Diaz, Solvej Dufour Andersen, Rineke Djikstra, Heri Dono, Mohamed El Baz, Roza El-Hassan, Fouad El Khoury, Anne-Marie Filaire, Yang Fudong, Carlos Garaicoa, Ghazel, Rula Halawani, Karin Hanssen, Dirk Herzog, Yu Hong, IRWIN, Emily Jacir, Mohammed Kazem, San Keller, Chris Kienke, Anna Kleberg, Miodrag Krkobabic, Nestor Kruger, Marcia Kure, Tim Lee, Zoe Leonard, Erik van Lieshout, Nalini Malani, Tracy Moffatt, Ingrid Mwangi, Moataz Nasr, Olaf Nicolai, Otobong Nkanga, Marcel Odenbach, Mark Pilkington, Marwan Rechmaoui, Mario Rizzi, Natascha Sadr-Haghighian, Huda Saeed, Jayce Salloum, Allan Sekula, Shirana Shahbazi, Solmaz Shahbazi, Hassan Sharif, Suha Shoman, Santiago Sierra, Peter Stoffel, Beat Streuli, Nedko Sulakov, Vivan Sundaram, Nadine Touma, Kelley Walker, Nari Ward, Carey Young.

Venues

This year’s Biennial will be held in the Sharjah Expo Centre and in the Sharjah Art Museum which is located in the Heritage Area. The museum houses a permanent art collection which is embedded in a local traditional style of architecture. Integrating parts of the Biennial within it is an attempt to engage with the structural parameters underlying the event. The Heritage Area around the museum is a network of small exhibition spaces, courtyards, alleyways and a souq. It mirrors a simple, unpretentious past, and the difficulties of reconstructing such a heritage within the fast-paced changes marking the Emirates today.

Participants and visitors will have to position themselves within a kaleidoscopic fabric of archaeological assets, modern and postmodern architecture, a booming consumer culture, long-standing traditions, unprecedented immigration and other interfaces – including the biennial itself. Working with this setting implies awkward questions of voyeurism and collaboration, tourism and respect. The now standard issues of alterity and glocalisation could be tested to their limits, beyond the comfortable frame of a customary biennial.

Commissions

The Sharjah Biennial 7 has commissioned a large number of site-specific projects some of which will be installation pieces and some will be performative interventions offering yet another opportunity to contextualise without being quaint, to explore and highlight, rather than play down, the limits between the privileged discourse of the artworld and the realm of the profane.

Symposia & Workshops

The Biennial will also include an international symposium, a rountable discussion with the writers of the Sharjah Biennial 7 Catalogue and artists and students workshops organised in collaboration with the American University of Sharjah, and the University of Sharjah’s College of Fine Arts.

Sharjah Biennial Art Prizes

Three Sharjah Biennial Prizes will be awarded for Best Work, Runner Up and Best Site Specific Work. Members of the Jury are Artist and Writer Walid Sadek, Curators and Critics Okwui Enwezor and Rina Carvajal.

The Catalogue

Edited by painter and art researcher Kamal Boullata, the bilingual catalogue includes essays by a constellation of international curators, scholars, and art and cultural critics. In addressing the theme of the biennial, their contributions provide a multifaceted insight into questions that challenge our inherited assumptions about home, identity, and belonging. Like the works of artists participating in the biennial, each essay broadens our perspective, allowing us to see across cultural divisions and beyond regional differences. Contributors: Frederick N. Bohrer, Nicolas Bourriaud, Boris Brollo, Laymert Garcia dos Santos, Jean Fisher, Elias Khoury, Joseph Massad, Khaled Mattawa, Gerardo Mosquera, Achille Bonito Oliva and Nadia Tazi.