At Carbon 12 in Dubai, Anahita Razmi presents a new solo exhibition centred on the critical dismantling of contemporary myths and on the processes through which meaning is produced and stabilised within global visual culture. Her work operates in a space where everyday objects, familiar symbols and popular references become tools for examining power structures, systems of belief and forms of cultural memory. For Razmi, myth is not a distant or obsolete narrative but an active mechanism that turns ordinary signs into ideological carriers. Digital icons, garments, talismanic objects and cultural references are stripped of fixed meanings and observed in their semantic volatility, shifting according to context, circulation and use. It is within this instability that the artist locates a site of tension, where visual language exposes its political and social implications. The exhibition brings together new works and further developments of existing series, unfolding across video, installation, photography and text-based interventions. Rather than offering linear readings, the works rely on displacement, juxtaposition and transformation, creating a visual field in which heterogeneous references coexist without predefined hierarchies. Myth is not simply exposed or undone, but analysed as a productive force that actively shapes perception and behaviour.
An anthology tracing over four decades of Leda Catunda’s work, weaving craft, pop culture, and a playful commentary on contemporary sensory consumption.
Mary Poppins - The Musical debuts in the United Arab Emirates in a West End production by Cameron Mackintosh and Disney Theatrical Group. With music, choreography, and dazzling stage effects, the show brings the timeless Disney classic to life with an international cast.
Opening on 17 January 2026 at Green Art Gallery in Dubai, The window refused to fly, and the arch decided to hold the sky is a solo exhibition by Asma Belhamar. The project engages with architecture as a site of memory and perception within the rapidly shifting urban landscape of the UAE.
Flowers and Absences: Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook's Retrospective in Dubai
The Jameel Arts Centre presents a survey of forty-five years of Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook’s practice. Through recurring motifs of flowers, beds and words, the Thai artist reflects on life, love and death, weaving together the personal and the collective.