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Tuesday, December 16, 2025 | Daily Newspaper published by GPPC Doha, Qatar.

Tag Results for "MF Husain" (6 articles)

Sahar meeting MF Husain in 2009, during which he shared insights about parts of Seero fi al Ardh
Qatar

Journalist recalls rare memories of MF Husain as Qatar unveils his dedicated museum

Her Highness Sheikha Moza bint Nasser on Thursday inaugurated Lawh Wa Qalam: MF Husain Museum at Qatar Foundation’s Education City, unveiling a landmark cultural space dedicated to the legendary modernist Maqbool Fida Husain.Conceived in close collaboration with the late artist and built on a promise made to him, the museum marks a historic addition to Qatar’s growing constellation of world-class museums.Among the invitees witnessing the inauguration was award-winning author, multimedia journalist, and cultural curator Sahar Zaman, who conducted one of the most widely watched interviews with Husain before his passing.With 25 years of experience and a celebrated career that includes founding Asia’s first arts web channel, Hunar TV, and authoring the acclaimed 2024 biography “Talat Mahmood: The Definitive Biography”, Sahar’s presence added a deeply personal dimension to the museum’s debut.Speaking with Gulf Times about her memories of the legendary artist, Sahar recalled her interviews with Husain during the last decade of his life—a period marked by creative urgency, global travel, and self-imposed exile.“I say with great pride and equal humility that MF Husain became a friend in the last and final decade of his life,” she said. “In his 90s, he was racing against time to finish his large-scale projects—Indian cinema, Arab civilization, and his final work Seero fi al Ardh.”She remembered interviewing him in Dubai, often accompanied by spontaneous moments that revealed his childlike energy. “I once sat with him in his red Ferrari for a short drive,” she said. “He told me the car would be part of an upcoming artwork. I laughed it off then—but a week later he flew to Italy to work on the Morano horses. His life moved at the pace of his Ferrari.”Reflecting on his creative vision, Sahar described Husain as “fearless”—an artist unmoved by judgment or controversy. “His strong brushstrokes and straight lines were a depiction of that fearlessness,” she said. “At 90-plus, he relocated to Doha to start afresh, create new work, and build a museum. His zest for life was unmatched.”Though his art stirred political controversies in India, Sahar believes time has reaffirmed his stature. “When the noise of those debates settles, it’s the genius of his work that shines. Collectors still vie for his art—just this year his Gram Yatra sold for a record $13.8 million. His significance remains unquestionable.”A promise fulfilled in DohaSahar described Lawh Wa Qalam as “a triumph of human spirit, unprecedented posthumous glory, and the honour of a promise made to him by Sheikha Moza.” She praised the museum not only as an artistic milestone but as a profound example of cultural stewardship.“It’s an exemplary display of a promise made and a promise kept,” she said. “Fourteen years have passed since Husain’s death, yet the commitment to build his museum was never forgotten. Sheikha Moza will be remembered in golden letters for preserving, showcasing, and reintroducing Husain to generations who might never have known him.”She added that the museum, positioned in Doha at the crossroads of East and West, will help bridge cultural narratives. “Lawh Wa Qalam will sit at the heart of the international art circuit,” she said. “It will not just preserve Husain’s story but create new dialogues between cultures.”A legacy for future generationsFor Sahar, the museum offers a powerful takeaway for visitors. “They will see that art takes time, struggle, and patience,” she said. “But when made with sincerity and purity, it becomes immortal and timeless.”She believes contemporary artists continue to draw lessons from Husain’s mastery. “His strokes—whether large canvases or tiny sketches—show extraordinary control and ease. And beyond technique, he was a once-in-a-generation mix of talent, showmanship, strategy, and marketing. He knew what to paint and how to sell.”As Qatar opens the doors to Lawh Wa Qalam, Sahar sees the museum not only as a tribute to a global icon but as a celebration of artistic resilience and cross-cultural understanding. “It brings together two worlds—India and Qatar—through the vision of a man who created his own language of modern Indian art,” she said.

Gulf Times
Qatar

Her Highness Sheikha Moza Opens the Lawh Wa Qalam M. F. Hussein Museum in Qatar

Her Highness Sheikha Moza bint Nasser, Chairperson of Qatar Foundation, on Thursday inaugurated the landmark 'Lawh Wa Qalam' museum in Education City, celebrating the legacy of late artist Maqbool Fida Husain. In her speech, Her Highness described Husain as "one such legendary artist - a true master whose artistic works transcend borders and connect cultures, histories, and identities". She added that the museum fulfills the late artist's dream, providing a space to display highlights of his life and work "based on an illustration sketched by the artist himself". Following the opening, Her Highness Sheikha Moza toured the museum's galleries, which trace Husain's artistic journey, exploring themes of faith, philosophy, cultural diversity, and his Yemeni roots. The museum also reflects his engagement with Arab civilization and his pursuit of unity amid diversity. The inauguration concluded with a formal dinner at the museum's Seeroo fi al ardh Hall, now a key feature of the museum. The ceremony was attended by Her Excellency Vice Chairperson of Qatar Foundation, Sheikha Hind bint Hamad Al-Thani; Their Excellencies sheikhs and ministers, along with an international assembly of art collectors and experts. The museum houses more than 150 works, including paintings, films, textiles, photographs, and personal items, some of which are being displayed publicly for the first time. It features the artist's final masterpiece, "Seeroo fi al ardh" completed posthumously in 2019 under Qatar Foundation's guidance. Designed by Husain himself, the museum serves as an educational and cultural hub, encouraging visitors to explore his creative journey. Facilities include a library, creativity corner, gift shop, cafe, and a hall for lectures and events. It will open to the public from Saturday to Thursday, 10:00 AM to 5:00 PM, and on Fridays from 1:30 PM to 7:30 PM, closing on Mondays and public holidays. "Lawh Wa Qalam" stands as a testament to Qatar's commitment to arts and culture, offering a space that inspires creativity, dialogue, and a deeper understanding of the world through the vision of Maqbool Fida Husain. 

Jowaher al-Marri
Qatar

Lawh Wa Qalam: M F Husain Museum opens Friday

Qatar Foundation (QF) will unveil Lawh Wa Qalam: M F Husain Museum to the public on Friday, a new addition to the arts and cultural landscape of Qatar, celebrating the life and work of the iconic modern artist Maqbool Fida Husain.The museum is described as a dynamic space where art meets learning, located in Education City. Jowaher al-Marri, manager of Communications Outreach at QF, said: “Lawh Wa Qalam: M F Husain Museum embodies what Education City stands for – a place where curiosity is encouraged, connections are made, and learning continues throughout life. By bringing Husain’s work into our community, we are creating a space that is open, accessible, and collaborative – where art becomes a catalyst for dialogue and discovery.“The museum reinforces Qatar’s role as a regional and global hub for culture and creativity, inviting people to explore ideas that inspire, challenge, and unite – and we look forward to opening its doors to the world and to audiences from all walks of life.”Syeda Deeba a fourth-year Interior Design student at Virginia Commonwealth University School of the Arts in Qatar said: “The opening of Lawh Wa Qalam: M F Husain Museum feels incredibly inspiring. The museum enriches Qatar’s cultural landscape by celebrating one of the most influential artists of the 20th century, and for young designers and artists, it offers a space to study the relationship between art, space, and culture.”Reflecting the openness and inclusivity of Education City, the museum complements existing cultural offerings across Qatar Foundation’s ecosystem, as well as its schools, universities, research centres, and community initiatives. This creates a natural environment for cross-collaborative learning, where people can connect, interact, and collaborate in enriching, unexpected ways.“Education City thrives on collaboration across fields design, engineering, science, medicine, and the arts. A museum dedicated to a major global artist adds a cultural anchor that everyone can access,” Deeba says.“The museum becomes a shared space where students from all disciplines can learn, reflect, and find inspiration. Whether someone is studying architecture, AI, business, or design, Husain’s work opens conversations about history, innovation, identity, and storytelling. It will encourage more cross-campus interactions, workshops, joint projects, and cultural exploration.”Housed in a building inspired by Husain’s own sketch – and brought to life by architect Martand Khosla – the museum offers a unique insight into the artist’s creative vision and multidisciplinary approach. Visitors can explore one of the most comprehensive collections of Husain’s later works, many of which draw on themes from Arab civilisation and Islamic culture, as well as his final masterpiece, Seeroo fi al ardh, which now forms part of Lawh Wa Qalam: M F Husain Museum.Alongside paintings, films, tapestries, and photography, the museum will host workshops, conversations, artistic programmes, and interdisciplinary encounters. In doing so, it reinforces Education City’s mission to create opportunities that are accessible, inclusive, and meaningful for everyone, enriching the landscape as an active, living space. 

Al Azzm
Qatar

QF to open Lawh Wa Qalam: M F Husain Museum this month

Qatar Foundation’s (QF) Lawh Wa Qalam: M F Husain Museum, set to open on November 28, will be the newest addition to Education City’s vibrant arts scene. Dedicated to the life and work of the renowned Maqbool Fida Husain, the museum will bring the pioneering modern artist’s creativity to life through multimedia storytelling and diverse art forms including paintings, films, tapestry, and photography.**media[380673]**Seeroo Fi Al Ardh – Husain’s final masterpiece, opened at Education City in 2019 – will now form part of Lawh Wa Qalam: M F Husain Museum. It highlights the progress of humanity, and its inclination to utilise the surrounding resources to achieve its goals.Alongside Lawh Wa Qalam: M F Husain Museum, QF has over 100 artworks within its portfolio of public art, all open for everyone to experience and enjoy.Here are other inspiring artworks, installations, and places at Education City where you can explore art, culture, and creativity: Mathaf: Arab Museum of Modern Art is dedicated to modern and contemporary art of the Arab world. Currently celebrating its 15-year anniversary, exhibitions include we refuse_d, which sees artists explore tensions between resilience and action.**media[380670]**Al Azzm is a sculpture within Education City which symbolises the determination of Qatari women, while also embodying Qatari culture and traditions and the resilience of the nation.Come Together, a public art installation designed by South Korean artist Choi Jeong Hwa, pays tribute to Qatar’s preparations for the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022. The structure, resembling a dandelion, is made up of workers’ helmets, mirror balls, and traditional Qatari kitchenware.The Media Majlis at Northwestern University in Qatar, a QF partner university, is the first museum in the Arab world dedicated to discussing and examining the content of media, journalism, and communication.Georgetown University in Qatar, a QF partner university, houses a panel of the Berlin Wall, which was brought to the country by Qatar Museums under the Qatar-Germany 2017 Year of Culture, as part of its Public Art Programme. The panel, reinforced with steel bars, is covered in spray painted graffiti that conveys messages of hope, freedom, and change.Damien Hirst’s The Miraculous Journey, which stands outside QF’s women’s and children’s hospital Sidra Medicine, is a series of 14 monumental bronze sculptures that chronicle the gestation of a foetus inside a uterus, from conception to birth.**media[380672]**Louise Bourgeois’ 1999 Maman, housed in Qatar National Convention Centre, is a bronze, stainless steel, and marble sculpture which depicts a spider, and – standing at over 30ft high and over 33ft wide - is among the largest sculptures in the world.

The dynamic visual panorama is created from images of more than 80 of Husain’s representative works interlaced with textual material.
Qatar

QM to present The Rooted Nomad: MF Husain in collaboration with Indian museum

Qatar Museums (QM), in collaboration with the Kiran Nadar Museum of Art (KNMA) New Delhi, is set to present The Rooted Nomad: MF Husain, an immersive exhibition having recourse to works by Maqbool Fida Husain (1913–2011), one of India’s iconic artists. Following its inaugural presentation at the 60th International Art Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia in 2024, The Rooted Nomad: MF Husain will be on view from October 28 to February 7, 2026 at QM Gallery Katara. It will be presented as a fully immersive, multi-sensory experiential project tracing Husain’s itinerant spirit and artistic pursuits from his formative years in India to his last years spent in Doha as a citizen of Qatar.The title captures the dual essence of Husain’s life — his deep connections to his homeland and his nomadic, cosmopolitan spirit. Through the artist’s distinguished portfolio of works that weave together myth, memory, and modernity, the exhibition reflects Husain’s vision of India as both an ancient civilisation and a postcolonial nation.Drawing upon a reserve of mythologies, shared histories, literature and manifestations, Husain articulated his harmonised vision of a modern India through a lexicon of symbolic iconographies anchored in a secular artistic sensibility. The dynamic visual panorama is created from images of more than 80 of Husain’s representative works interlaced with textual material that includes his photographs, drawings, poems, cinema posters, and rarely seen archival material. Central to Husain’s artistic inquiry is a restless consciousness, shaped by a lifetime of movement and encounters that make us dwell upon ideas of mobility, migration, moving across borders and beyond geographical and cultural boundaries.In a press statement, Sheikha Reem al-Thani, acting deputy CEO of Exhibitions, Public Art, and Rubaiya Qatar and Director of Central Exhibitions at QM, said: “Husain’s vision—spanning continents, histories, and identities—reflects the spirit of exchange that defines Qatar’s cultural landscape today. This immersive exhibition offers audiences a renewed encounter with an artist whose work continues to inspire global conversations on belonging and creativity.”Conceived and curated by KNMA and visualised and designed by Visioni Srl, Rome, the immersive experience has been reimagined since its inaugural presentation in Venice to introduce new spatial and sensory experiences. The immersive attempts to unpack expanded notions of the idea of ‘yatra’ or journey, both as a crux to civilisational ethos and artistic calling as well as a metaphor for transformation.The complex production integrates motion graphics, live action, 2D and 3D animation, choreography, and sound design. It offers a deeply humanistic and unifying vision, seamlessly blending Husain’s versatile oeuvre to narrate the complex story of this singular figure while reminding audiences of shared narratives that connect people across geographies and generations.Roobina Karode, director and chief curator at KNMA, said: “The Rooted Nomad aims to bring to new audiences the creative journey of the artist with his striking composite quasi-abstract language melding calligraphy, idealised motifs from ancient Indian reliefs and folk traditions, pictorially representing varied themes including the Mahabharata, Karbala and The Last Supper with poetic brevity”.The exhibition is presented as part of Evolution Nation, an 18-month campaign honouring Qatar’s cultural journey over the past 50 years, since the founding of the National Museum of Qatar, and builds on the legacy of the Qatar–India 2019 Year of Culture.

Gulf Times
Qatar

Qatar Foundation is set to open the Lawh Wa Qalam M. F. Husain Museum at Education City in November

Qatar Foundation will launch Lawh Wa Qalam: M. F. Husain Museum - a new addition to Qatar's cultural landscape, dedicated to the life and work of one of the most influential figures in the history of modern art: Maqbool Fida Husain.The museum, which opens its doors to the public on Nov. 28, 2025, will foster creativity and dialogue while being a space for learning and discovery, as it joins the growing number of public spaces within Qatar Foundation's Education City that celebrate and perpetuate art, heritage, and innovation.Offering a deeply immersive art experience, the museum will invite visitors to step inside the world of Maqbool Fida Husain and explore the influences, philosophies, and memories that shaped his artistic journey. Through multimedia storytelling and art forms including paintings, films, tapestry, photography, and poetry, the museum will bring Husain's creativity to life in bold and innovative ways that resonate with audiences across Qatar and the wider region.The design of the museum mirrors a sketch by Husain depicting the architectural concept he envisioned for the building, which he saw as being an artwork in itself, reflecting his lifelong pursuit of innovation and his artistic work across diverse fields.The opening of the museum reflects Qatar Foundation's mission to create spaces where education, culture, and community come together for the benefit of Qatar and beyond. This vision is reflected across Education City's centers of learning as well as its cultural and public spaces that encourage discovery and connection - with Lawh Wa Qalam: M. F. Husain Museum being the latest example."Designed as a space for inspiration and creativity, Lawh Wa Qalam: M. F. Husain Museum reflects Qatar Foundation's dedication to providing spaces for everyone to explore, enjoy, learn from, and be inspired by art and culture," said Executive Director of Community Engagement and Programming, Qatar Foundation Kholoud Mohammed Al Ali."This immersive museum will provide a space for exploration, discovery, and critical thinking, fostering artistic dialogue and creating meaningful connections with audiences of all ages and backgrounds."Husain's remarkable journey as an artist mirrors the vibrant spirit of Education City, and his timeless works that will be displayed for all to experience in Lawh Wa Qalam: M. F. Husain Museum will further enrich Qatar Foundation's portfolio of public art, with over 100 works currently being displayed across Education City. Within the multidisciplinary environment of knowledge that is Education City, this museum will illustrate the power of creativity to inspire, educate, and foster the cross-cultural understanding that connects communities and worlds," Kholoud added.Seeroo fi al ardh - the Education City-based art installation that represents Husain's final masterpiece, celebrating the progress of humanity - will form part of Lawh Wa Qalam: M. F. Husain Museum, as a gallery in itself where visitors will have the opportunity to experience the celebrated artist's work being brought to life through a specially-curated show.