Amal Kenawys The Silent Multitudes (2010) is part of the show at the Mathaf museum
Photo © Wael Mansour
Against a backdrop of regional diplomatic crisis, which has seen several neighbouring Gulf countries cut diplomatic relations with Qatar since 2017, the small energy-rich nation is hosting two shows exploring the sensitive histories of Middle Eastern states.
Syria Matters, which opens this week at the Museum of Islamic Art, will include more than 120 objects from five periods in Syrias history. “Syria is a subject that has been addressed in Europe and the US in shows and workshops but it hasnt really been dealt with in the Middle East,” says the museums director Julia Gonnella.
The show aims not only to highlight Syrias heritage but also to “plead to safeguard this unique legacy in danger”, according to a museum statement. Despite this plea and the fact that there are currently no diplomatic relations between Qatar and Syria, Gonnella says the show focuses only on cultural heritage. “It is one of our serious concerns that we dont want to become political,” she says. “This is the beauty of museums—they can just show the state of the art and make you think whether a situation is worthwhile.”
Meanwhile, the seemingly political show Revolution Generations opened last month at the Mathaf Museum of Arab Modern Art. The exhibition, which includes artists from Turkey and Iran as well as the Arab world, looks at how political movements in the Middle East and North Africa have affected the areas art. “The art [in the show] is political,” says Mathafs director, Abdellah Karroum, but he stresses that the exhibition is not about politics. “The museum and its curators have a responsibility to look at art histories,” he says.
The show looks at the post-independence period, the pan-Arab movement in the 1970s, and just before the Arab Spring uprisings in 2011. Karroum says: “We are very interested in what has happened since the Arab Spring. The museum is in the process of collecting works from this period—there is another exhibition to do.”
One of the key pieces in the show is Amal Kenawys The Silent Multitudes (2010), made from more than 100 gas canisters, which captures the volatile situation in Egyptian society at the time.
• Syria Matters, Museum of Islamic Art, Doha, 23 November-30 April 2019
• Revolution Generations, Mathaf Museum of Arab Modern Art, Doha, until 16 February 2019
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