The exhibition has three sections, and includes:
Articulating the Particular
Contemporary Visual Narratives presented how artists responded to and documented the transformation of society, traditional practices and contemporary identity. This section featured 115 works in all media by artists from Qatar, including 19 Qatari artists and 16 international artists, who have practised art in the country. Artists include: Maryam Ahmed, Noor Abuissa, Nasser Al-Attiyah, Ahmed Al Jufairi, Abeer Al Kuwari, Bouthayna Al-Muftah, Sara Obaidli, Roudha Al-Nasser, Nofe Al-Suwaidi, Fahad Al Obaidly, Aisha Al-Suwaidi, Shaha Alkhulaifi, Fatma Al-Remaihi, Hana Al Saadi, Khalifa Al Obaidli, Maryam Al Semaitt & Nawar Al Mutlaq, Maryam Al Suwaidi, Maryam Al Homaid, Richard Blackwell, Sebastian Betancur Montoya, Mariah Dekkenga, Amr Elafrawy, Tanzeela Khan Abbas, Cesc Grane, Nesma Khodier, Othman M.R. Khunji, Christto & Andrew, Zoe Hawk, Kelley Lowe, Lulu M, Charles Mahaffee, Simone Muscolino, Juan Martinez Demedina, Emelina Soares, Titika Stamouli, Rachel Leah Cohn, Clemens Bauder and Zach Stensen.
Highlighting QM’s success in nurturing artists and providing them with opportunities to display their work, this section was jointly curated by members of Qatar Museums’ curatorial team based in Doha: Dr Bahaa Abudaya and Aisha Nasser Al Sowaidi.
Cultural Exposures
Photography and Film from Qatar included work by Qatari photographers at home and abroad, as well as guest photographers who visited Qatar as part of the Years of Culture exchanges with Brazil, Turkey and China. Among those represented are Manar Yousef, Abdulla Faisal Al-Khalaf, Khalifa Al Obaidli, Andre Joaquim, Leonardo Wen, Aref Al Ammari, Abdullha Al Tamimi, Sara Al Obaidly, Salih Al Marri, Ali Bayraktaroğlu, Hasan Yelken, Ahmed Al Khulaifi, Saeed Al Marri, Bao Lixia, Liu Zhining and Xu Xinrong. The photographs offer a picture of the life and landscape of contemporary Qatar, and reveal the perspective of its photographers on the wider world.
The nine films, produced under the auspices of the Doha Film Institute, are by some of Qatar’s talented emerging film-makers: Shaima Al Tamimi, Mariam Salim, Jassim Al-Rumaihi, Aisha Abduljawad, Amina Ahmed Al Bloshi, Majid Al-Remaihi, Rawda Al-Thani, A.J. Al Thani, Amal Al-Muftah and Ahmad Abdelnaser. They explore aspects of tradition and modernity in Qatar, and the challenges of reconciling the two during a period of rapid change.
Co-curated by members of Qatar Museums’ curatorial team based in Doha, Dr Giles Hudson and Maryam Al-Thani, this section highlighted how artists and creators from different countries have benefited from the cultural exchanges that took place in the last few years.
A selection of 28 portraits from Hey’Ya
Arab Women in Sport, a photography and video exhibition by Brigitte Lacombe and Marian Lacombe, commissioned by Qatar Museums in 2012, featured portraits and interviews of 90 Arab Female Athletes, 31 of whom are from Qatar.
The creative direction of the exhibition was led by Shk. Reem Al Thani, Head of Exhibition Design at Qatar Museums. The experience of the exhibition was designed and crafted to integrate many forms of media and dialogues that are unique to Qatar and the way our audiences engaged with exhibitions.
Coinciding with this major exhibition in Berlin, as part of Qatar Germany 2017 Year of Culture, two large-scale exhibitions took place in Doha: Driven by German Design, tracing the development of German design from the 1950s to the present day, at QM Gallery Al Riwaq (until 14 January 2018), and German Encounters: Contemporary Masterpieces from the Deutsche Bank Collection at Doha Fire Station (until 20 January 2018).