At the Louvre Abu Dhabi, technology is not a spectacular add-on but a narrative tool. With Quantum Dome Project. A Collective VR Experience, the Emirati museum introduces a new way of visiting, one that places the body, shared space and time as a living material at its core. Visitors do not enter a gallery, but a dome: an immersive environment where virtual reality does not isolate the individual viewer but constructs a collective experience. Inside the dome, groups of visitors move together, without joysticks or visible interfaces. Wireless headsets track real body movements, transforming the physical space into a device for historical traversal. The feeling is not that of looking at the past, but of temporarily inhabiting it. The experience unfolds as a journey through three worlds: Imperial Rome, Medieval Baghdad and Mughal India. Each passage originates from a real object in the museum’s collection, as if the works themselves held a memory capable of extending beyond the display case. The narrative is framed by an almost science-fiction setting. Visitors are welcomed into an imaginary laboratory hidden beneath the museum, where history is not recounted but extracted, reactivated and set into motion. From here comes the leap across centuries, into monumental architecture, libraries, courts and living cities. There is no traditional didactic route, no lesson to be learned. The device operates through suggestion, emotional immersion and physical proximity to the places and people of the past. The Quantum Dome Project fits seamlessly into the cultural vision of the Louvre Abu Dhabi, which since its opening has chosen to present human history as an interconnected fabric, free from rigid geographical or chronological hierarchies. Virtual reality becomes a natural extension of this approach rather than a demonstrative gesture. Technology does not replace the artwork but amplifies it, turning the act of visiting into an experience of shared presence. At a time when many museums deploy digital tools as parallel attractions, the Louvre Abu Dhabi takes a more demanding and less immediate path. Virtual reality here is not escapism, but a critical space in which to question how history is transmitted and experienced. The immersive dome thus becomes a site of symbolic passage, where the past is not reconstructed in order to be explained, but reactivated in order to be experienced.
The Task of the Mythologist introduces Anahita Razmi’s practice, focused on the cultural transfer of images and gestures. Through appropriation, irony and conceptual rigor, her work challenges fixed notions of identity and dominant narratives. Razmi explores myth as an unstable structure, constantly open to reinterpretation.
World Art Dubai confirms its role as a fair focused on scale and direct access rather than curatorial selection. With over 400 exhibitors, more than 10.000 works and around 15.000 visitors, the event stands out as a key fixture in Dubai’s art calendar, centred on an immediate encounter between art and audiences.
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.
At Jameel Art Centre in Dubai, the exhibition devoted to Salah Elmur brings together recent works that combine painting and archival photography. Moving between personal memory and collective history, the show presents images shaped by distance, loss and suspension.