Qatar
Four Qatari artists selected to create public art pieces for National Museum
Four Qatari artists selected to create public art pieces for National Museum
February 28, 2019 | 12:55 AM
Qatar Museums (QM) announced that four Qatari artists have created commissioned pieces that will be displayed inside the new National Museum of Qatar (NMoQ) as part of QM’s vast Public Art Programme. The announcement provides further insight into the way the NMoQ will tell the story of Qatar’s past, present and future through an immersive, multilayered experience.NMoQ’s exhibition galleries and public spaces include a multitude of personal histories and interpretations of Qatari identity, among which are pieces by some of the country’s brightest artistic talents. The commissioned artworks will play a central role in this by offering unique perspectives on treasured Qatari traditions and the life of the Qatari people. Following an extensive search, Qatari artists Aisha Nasser al-Sowaidi, Ali Hassan, Bouthayna al-Muftah, and Sheikh Hassan bin Mohamed al-Thani were chosen based on their body of work and artistic vision. Each has taken personal histories and memories to create site-specific pieces that will connect visitors to the story of Qatar and its people in unexpected ways. “It is important to us to use the opening of the new National Museum, which embodies our heritage and gives voice to our aspirations, to showcase the work of our local artists. Each of their extraordinary creations is a unique and moving contribution to the breathtaking experience that the museum offers,” NMoQ director HE Sheikha Amna bint Abdulaziz al-Thani said. Welcoming visitors inside NMoQ is a wall installation by Ali Hassan, Wisdom of a Nation, which draws on the image of the Qatari flag with an excerpt from a poem by the founder of modern-day Qatar, Sheikh Jassim bin Mohamed al-Thani. Standing before the entrance to the permanent galleries is a large-scale sculpture, Motherland, by Sheikh Hassan, which evokes the connections between the land, motherhood and national identity. Within the VIP Lounge, visitors will encounter a work by al-Sowaidi, Central Midkhan, which takes the idea of a traditional and local ritual, and transforms it into a global concept of home systems. Al-Sowaidi is a graduate of the prestigious Fire Station: Artist in Residence programme and participant in the internationally-acclaimed Contemporary Art Qatar exhibitions. Al-Muftah, one of Qatar’s most popular emerging artists, called on the heritage of Qatari jewellery to create her installation, Kan Ya Ma Kaan, which is located in the cafe named after the work, Cafe 875. The work takes inspiration from traditional Qatari jewellery and ‘Thahab’ or 875 gold (21 karat). The installation has been designed to complement the museum’s contemporary architecture. A number of international artists have also been commissioned to develop site-specific works for the NMoQ. Standing outside of the NMoQ near the historic Palace of Sheikh Abdullah bin Jassim al-Thani is a sculptural group by French artist Roch Vandromme, which evokes the long history of nomadic lifestyle and trade. Simone Fattal’s sculpture, located in the walkway toward the entrance to the museum, is inspired by petroglyphs found at Al Jassasiya. There will also be an installation by Iraqi artist Ahmed al-Bahrani. An installation by Jean-Michel Othoniel is the largest ever conceived by the artist and consists of dozens of individual structures, paying homage to traditional calligraphy.
February 28, 2019 | 12:55 AM