جدول: Mon / Wed / Thu / Sat / Sun 10 am - 8 pm | Fri 12 pm - 8 pm | Tue closed
تذاكر: Free admission
البريد الإلكتروني:
الموقع: Jameel Arts Centre
العنوان: Jaddaf Waterfront
There is a wind blowing through the palm trees and bringing with it voices, gestures, images. It does not come from far away, but from within. It is the deep breath of Seas are sweet, fish tears are salty, the first institutional exhibition by Mohammad Alfaraj at the Jameel Arts Centre in Dubai. A title that is already poetry, or perhaps an ecological parable. Born in Al-Ahsa, in the heart of Saudi Arabia, Alfaraj returns to his homeland not to tell it realistically, but to evoke it. The exhibition moves like a visual and sound poem: photographs, videos, found objects, organic materials and site-specific installations build a sensitive landscape, in which hands become symbols, fallen fruit speaks, birds observe. The stories are not linear. They nest in the margins, between agricultural memory and environmental transformation, between tradition and trauma. Alfaraj does not explain: he suggests. His works - also scattered outdoors, in the gardens of the centre - ask for time, listening, willingness to get lost. As in oases, water is not immediately visible, but it is there. And it is sweet. Imagination is the vital element that binds everything. A force that resists concrete, that protects, that invents new alliances between human and non-human beings. Alfaraj composes a narrative ecology where the boundaries are blurred: art does not represent, but summons. The exhibition is not alone. It is accompanied by a program of meetings and workshops open to families and children, in a gesture of restitution and sharing. After all, the artist - a mechanical engineer by training, but an active presence on the international scene for years - works right there where science, history and imagination meet.
Curated by Bernhard Buhmann at Carbon 12 Dubai, The Narrative of Decline is a group exhibition addressing aesthetics and social meanings of decline. Through painting, installation, and performance, the selected artists reflect on impermanence, memory, and cycles of rise and fall.
Béchir Boussandel, Emotional Geographies of Survival
Béchir Boussandel, an artist divided between Tunisia and France, shapes mental landscapes that speak of the social invisibility of gleaners - the “gleaner” or "berbasha" - transforming organic materials, blown glass, oil paint, and metal into emotional geographies of survival and belonging.
At Green Art Gallery Dubai, Nazgol Ansarinia explores the threshold between private space and social control, turning architecture into a visual and political device. Glass, steel, and concrete become tools of vision and defense. A striking exhibition that reverses the gaze.
Great anticipation for the Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championship 2026
Among the expected protagonists of the 2026 women's draw are Iga Świątek, Aryna Sabalenka, Jessica Pegula, Coco Gauff and Belinda Bencic, while on the men's circuit, all eyes are on athletes such as Tsitsipas, Rublev, de Minaur, Medvedev and Humbert, already protagonists of recent finals in Dubai.