Curating a postcolonial vision at Sharjah Biennial 15 with Sheikha Hoor Al Qasimi
It took four years for curator, President and Director of the Sharjah Art Foundation, Sheikha , to bring together Sharjah Biennialâs latest edition, which opened on February 7 and gathers 300 works from artists representing 70 countries.
Entitled Thinking Historically in the Present, Sharjah Biennial 15 embodies a platform to discuss postcolonial multitudes and solidarities, the strength of resistance to power, and the spirit of remembrance and reparations â themes that Nigerian curator, critic, and researcher , who originally conceived this event before his untimely passing in 2019, had championed for decades.
Al Qasimi shared with °źÂț”ș her earliest memory of Enwezor. The formative encounter set a new ambition for Sharjahâs art institution and influenced the way she would eventually envision her role in driving this vision forward.
"Sharjah Biennial 15 embodies a platform to discuss postcolonial multitudes and solidarities, the strength of resistance to power, and the spirit of remembrance and reparations"
âSomething definitely moved me when I went to Documenta,â she recalls. Enwezor was the first non-European art director of , a major exhibition of contemporary art that interrogates the world in which we live, taking place every five years.
âWhy canât we do something with the Sharjah Biennial that can affect people who donât have the privilege of going to Kassel in Germany,â she asked herself then, a question that would prove to be decisive as she took the reins of the Sharjah Biennial the following year in her early 20s.
Now at the helm of the Sharjah Biennial for the last 20 years, this experience encouraged Al Qasimi to reflect on the mission and identity of the Sharjah Biennial, investing in continuous, year-on-year conversations rather than focusing on short-lived art events.
A shift was needed. âYou exhibited and then you went quiet for two years. Two years is a long time, especially for children. So how to keep a regular presence with the public?â
One way was for the institution to engage at the local level. âWe have a presence in seven towns.â She smiles. The Art Foundation she leads renovates buildings, organises workshops and residencies, and works with the emirateâs children and youth through community programmes. âI really want people to feel like they own the place. They are the people who will inhabit them all the time â not the people flying in and out.â
|
Reflecting on her career, she takes pride in incubating local and global talents, and in the people who have grown with her over the years. âI look after the team,â she says, several of which she first met as children and are with the Foundation today.
To foster a multicultural discussion in which she aspires to be polyphonic and decentralised, Al Qasimi â a trained painter â sees her position as âan artist who curatesâ as opposed to a solitary, authoritative model of curating. âWhen people ask me whether I continue to practice, I tell them yes, with the Foundation. Itâs my project, I see it in that way.â
The Biennial follows the concept of circularity. âWe had exhibitions where curators say: you have to go this way. But sometimes, buildings donât work that way. You may go up, then go down, and miss one part. And you see it in our spaces, whereâs the beginning? Itâs the one you chose. You make your own journey.â
She embraces intuition and patience, relies on a wide network of artists, curators, gallerists, and friends, and has extensive travels to keep abreast of new works. âI see artworks that I would never forget,â she explains. Though she may have seen films or textile works years prior, she keeps them in mind, for the right time.
She shows me a picture of herself with Aboriginal artists in the Australian desert; they are now on show. âIf I feel something I donât ignore it. I trust those instincts because going to Documenta was an instinct and if I hadnât done that, I wouldnât be here now.â
Sharjah, an internationally-recognised hub for African and Asian cultural actors to converse, is also opening to narratives and voices from South America and beyond. Al Qasimi long expressed the importance of initiatives that are deliberately rooted.
âI set up the and again I didnât do it out of nowhere.â She marks a pause. âThereâs a purpose that itâs here.â In 1976, Sharjah hosted the first Symposium on African and Arab Relations which gathered 45 African and Arab intellectuals to discuss cultural friendship and historical linkages.
Now in its fifth year of operation, the Africa Institute, headed by the academic, critic, and curator , is expanding the study of Africa and its diaspora to advance knowledge and understanding.
Similarly, when Al Qasimi became the first Emirati national to curate the , she revived a history and anchored the show in a lineage, honouring the achievements of pioneering artists and cultural actors in the UAE, such as the Emirates Fine Art Society, a non-profit institution established in 1980 in Sharjah.
|
The contemporary art scene in the Gulf region has significantly evolved since the 1980s. She likes to tell visitors that the Sharjah Biennial is only one of several art festivals ongoing in Sharjah. âThereâs a lot and sometimes itâs too much because we have to keep up,â she observes.
The first opened in Jeddah last month and is around the corner.
âItâs good but also we need to slow down, thatâs why I added an extra month to the Biennial,â she says. The Sharjah Biennial which traditionally starts in March was moved up to February and will close in June. It was initially scheduled for 2021.
âPeople went through so much and lost loved ones,â she says of the COVID-19 pandemic. Giving space to artists to recover and an opportunity for them to show multiple works in Sharjah also entailed borrowing from different collections and, while doing so, overcoming administrative and logistical hurdles. âIt was worth the wait,â she assesses, even if the delay meant losing her budget last year.
âFundraising is always a challenge but we have sponsors. People stepped up,â she notes. âThis turnout is encouraging partners to continue supporting us.â
As the Sharjah Biennial opening week closes, Al Qasimi already looks ahead. A catalogue to complete, with in-depth interviews of the artists, and more coming up on the local and international scene.
âNow is the exciting part for me,â she says, as visitors are meandering their way through Sharjahâs art museum, its heritage houses, old clinic, courthouse, and kindergarten. âIâm interested in people seeing the art in different ways.â
As it becomes evident when visiting the 19 venues of the Biennial, the postcolonial world presented in Sharjah is made up of various worlds. Yet there are commonalities, shared emotions, and experiences that bind individuals and communities together.
Enwezor had called the two components of this invisible fabric âa dislocation of belongingâ and a âdisjunction of time.â
The Biennial interrogates these fractures, which arenât just about examining the past. âFor sure, itâs still broken,â Al Qasimi affirms.
Yet she underscores âmoments of recognitionâ and âmoments of solidarityâ in works and expressions that seek and find connections with one another, âfrom top to bottom, right and left.â In their common echo, we hear the daring notes of a different future.
Farah Abdessamad is a New York City-based essayist/critic, from France and Tunisia.
Follow her on Twitter:Ìę