News
New Appointments at Ibraaz
Ibraaz is pleased to announce a series of new appointments in 2016. Artist and curator Ala Younis will join us as our Contributing Editor and curator Amira Gad joins us as Commissioning Editor for essays. Both will be working closely with our Editor-in-Chief Anthony Downey on a series of upcoming projects, including the launch of Platform 010 in May, 2016, and the publication of Volume 03 in our Visual Culture series, Future Imperfect: Cultural Institutions and Contemporary Art Practices in the Middle East.
We are pleased to welcome a number of new editorial correspondents, some of whom will be already familiar to Ibraaz readers: Rahel Aima, Monira Al Qadiri, Shiva Balaghi, Laura Cugusi, Mai Elwakil, Reema Fadda, Samah Hijawi, Natasha Hoare, Göksu Kunak, and Tom Snow.
Stephanie Bailey, formerly Ibraaz Managing Editor, will take over from Omar Kholeif as Senior Editor, following Kholeif's recent appointment as Manilow Senior Curator at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago. We would like to take this opportunity to thank Omar for his contributions to Ibraaz, and wish him all the best in his new position.
We present some recent contributions by our new editorial team below. Find out more about everyone on the About Us page, here.
Essays
The Future of Art in the Age of Militarized De-Production |
Reema Salha Fadda |
Tracing Dissent at the Margins of Empire |
||
Ahmad Makia and Rahel Aima |
||
|
||
How Toshihiko Made Me Understand Islam |
||
Monira Al Qadiri |
||
|
||
Performativity and Public Space |
||
Samah Hijawi |
||
|
||
Interviews
New Kids On The Block |
||
Randa Mirza in conversation with Amira Gad |
||
|
||
Past Disquiet |
||
Rasha Salti and Kristine Khouri in conversation with Samah Hijawi |
||
|
||
The Great Journey |
||
Lidia Al-Qattan in conversation with Monira Al Qadiri |
||
|
||
A Letter’s Discourse |
||
Yazan Khalili and Lara Khaldi in conversation with Natasha Hoare |
||
|
||
Place, Space and Purpose |
||
Lina Majdalanie in conversation with Göksu Kanak |
||
|
||
Reviews
Colony – Latitude |
SALTWATER: A Theory of Thought Forms |
Mai Elwakil |
Tom Snow |
Mai Elwakil reviews Colony – Latitude, an exhibition by Egyptian artist Shady El Noshokaty at Cairo's Gypsum Gallery (5 October–25 November 2015). For this show, the artist presented a living sculpture that grew over an eight-week period: a bubblegum-pink mountain range presenting the highest land points in each of his chosen colonies, inspired by a map from 1850, drawing out issues around colonization and architectural space. |
Tom Snow offers an in-depth review on the 14th Istanbul Biennial, SALTWATER: A Theory of Thought Forms, an exhibition bound together – according to 'organizer' Carolyn Christov-Barkargiev – by 'one of the most ubiquitous materials in the world'. In response, Snow writes: 'Ubiquity might well speak to the conflicted politics of biennials currently, irrefutably caught between the homogenizing processes of neoliberal globalization and the movement against it'. |
News
Six Decades in the Making |
Townhouse: Practical Solutions, Impractical Conditions |
Shiva Balaghi |
Laura Cugusi |
In this report, Parviz Tanavoli discusses his first comprehensive US museum retrospective, Parviz Tanavoli at the Davis Museum at Wellesley College, with one of the exhibit's curators, Dr. Shiva Balaghi. |
On 6 October 2015, London's Serpentine Galleries director Hans Ulrich Obrist hosted a talk with William Wells, founder of Cairo's Townhouse Gallery. Ibraaz editorial correspondent Laura Cugusi reports. |