The chances have been stacked towards Artwork Dubai because it ready to mark its twentieth anniversary this 12 months. Plans for an expanded version have been derailed by the US-Israel warfare in Iran, and in March, when organisers introduced they’d transfer the truthful from mid-April to Could, the Gulf was nonetheless below risk from Iranian missiles and drones. Round 75 exhibitors dropped out.
The truthful has now opened at its standard venue at Madinat Jumeirah. Going down till 17 Could, this particular version was put collectively inside weeks in response to geopolitical developments.
“It’s a second that’s completely different than what we initially anticipated,” says Benedetta Ghione, the chief director at Artwork Dubai Group. “However in a approach, it superbly displays the DNA of Dubai, the energy of the neighborhood that has supported us for the previous twenty years. We had eight weeks to plan. Components of the programme have been already there, and we have been in a position to carry them by way of. Others we needed to adapt.”
Dunja Gottweis, the brand new director of the truthful, says the overhauled plan required them to return to “sq. one” in some ways. “We needed to begin each dialog once more, and test if galleries wished to take part,” she says. “I had like a day and a half to create a brand new flooring plan. I closed myself in a room for eight hours and solely got here out after I had a light-bulb second.”
The truthful is noticeably scaled again. The digital part, as an example, is now embedded inside the primary exhibition corridor and never in its standard website at Jumeirah Mina Al Salam. There are additionally fewer galleries collaborating—round 50 exhibitors, principally from the area.
Nonetheless, the occasion is bustling, and lots of guests say there’s a attraction to this revised, extra compact format. “With so many artwork festivals on the earth and within the area, there’s a threat of artwork truthful fatigue,” says Wol Balston, co-founder of Flint Tradition. “I respect having much less work to take a look at. High quality over amount.”
The collector Abraham Karabajakian, who travelled from Lebanon, echoes the sentiment. He says he was adamant on attending Artwork Dubai this 12 months, curious to see how the truthful would adapt. “With out artwork and tradition, we now have nothing,” he says. “I like that the truthful is extra intimate. It’s giving me the prospect to understand the works extra. I already purchased two.”
Preliminary gross sales stories are promising. George Al Ama, the co-owner of the Ramallah-based Gallery One, says a number of works by Samira Badran have already been bought, such because the 1978 etchings Jerusalem Window and Door of Jerusalem, priced at $3,500 and $5,000 respectively, in addition to works by Mostafa Al Hallaj, starting from $6,500 to $40,000.
Photograph: Cedric Ribeiro/ Getty Photographs for Artwork Dubai.
The Abu Dhabi-based Iris Tasks is presenting two rising artists, Safeya Sharif and Alyazia Al Nahyan. Its founder Maryam Al Falasi says their works are attracting consideration from collectors and establishments alike. “We selected two artists from Dubai, each from Gen-Z,” Al Falasi says. “Each of them draw from nature. Alyazia extracts pigments from pure supplies, dyes materials and creates summary landscapes.”
Sharif, in the meantime, bases her work on satellite tv for pc imagery of sand dunes, documenting how they journey and morph in line with the climate. A trio of palm-sized works, as an example, reveals how dune ridges have been reformed throughout the 2024 floods.
Al Falasi says there are a number of collectors which are significantly focused on Sharif’s Strains of Persistence, a big wall-mounted sculpture that depicts the lateral actions of sand dunes. The work is priced at $10,000. “There may be additionally an establishment that’s focused on buying works by Alyazia, which vary from $5,500 to $9,000.”
Taymour Grahne Tasks reportedly bought out its solo presentation of Roudhah Al Mazrouei, priced as much as $13,500. Zawyeh Gallery, in the meantime, bought a number of works by Nabil Anani, together with An Olive Panorama, priced at $360,000.
Whereas the market has began off robust, the non-commercial parts of the truthful are what make it distinct from earlier iterations. There are devoted areas for vinyl-listening, poetry readings and multimedia works. DXB Retailer has additionally returned for the primary time since 2014, providing restricted version works produced in the previous couple of weeks by native artists and practitioners, together with Khalid Mezaina, Moza Al Matrooshi and Wafa Al Falahi.
“There are greater than 70 members, all UAE-based,” says Natasha Carella, who’s overseeing the DXB Retailer. “They’ve all created new merchandise, only for this particular version of Artwork Dubai.”

Massive-scale installations are proven all through the venue, together with Khalid Al Banna’s two colossal sculptural types
Massive-scale installations are additionally peppered all through the venue. Hashel Al Lamki’s Maat is suspended from the ceiling above the gallery cubicles. The work is constructed from reclaimed lodge linens, bridal materials and burial cloths which were dyed with pigments from discarded flowers. Khalid Al Banna is presenting two colossal sculptural types, square-headed figures which have turn out to be idiosyncratic of the artist. One looms over the central exhibition area. The opposite is positioned open air, beside the canals of Madinat Jumeirah. The architects Ahmed and Rashid bin Shabib are additionally presenting a model of their manama set up, which they’d proven ultimately 12 months’s Venice Structure Biennale. A twist on the normal vernacular construction discovered throughout the Gulf, the three constructions characteristic vibrant pitched roofs and function assembly areas between the gallery halls.
Having visited the truthful yearly since 2015, guests together with Balston say they’re noticing a wholesome steadiness between industrial and institutional displays. This was, maybe, one of many silver linings of this revamped version. As dozens of galleries couldn’t attend, a number of establishments supplied to exhibit works from their collections.
The Dubai Assortment is presenting Made Ahead, an exhibition that attracts from greater than 20 personal collections to look at themes of belonging and community-building. Famed Modernists similar to Louay Kayali, Leila Nseir and Gazbia Sirry are displayed alongside up to date items by Mohamed Ahmed Ibrahim, Afra Al Dhaheri and Larissa Sansour.
Barjeel Artwork Basis can be displaying highlights from its esteemed assortment of Trendy Arab artwork, together with items by Mahmoud Stated, Etel Adnan, Marwan Kassab Bachi and Samia Halaby.
Different institutional collaborations embrace Transferring, a programme of video works co-curated with Alserkal. It contains items by Faisal Samra, Dima Srouji, Bady Dalloul and Mohammed Kazem, amongst others. The works are being screened in a delegated area with low lighting and lounge-style seating. They’re additionally being introduced at Alserkal Avenue.
“The programme happened as we considered the best way to help the native ecosystem. It was a collaborative effort with our galleries,” says Vilma Jurkute, the chief director of Alserkal. “It permits guests to expertise transferring picture in a really completely different format.”
Jurkute says she is thrilled that the truthful managed to proceed as deliberate. “It’s a reflection of our collective resilience,” she says. “The truth that they did it, that they pulled it off, is unimaginable. They usually didn’t should.”








