Palestinian Art: Memory, Exile and Belonging

Palestinian Art: Memory, Exile and Belonging
#Exhibitions
Samia Halaby, Evening in the Desert, 2019 | Courtesy © Samia Halabyt, Zawyeh Gallery, Dubai

In the works gathered in Elusive Territories, Palestine rarely appears as a direct image or recognizable landscape. Emergence often means fragmentation: abstract colors, suspended geometries, interrupted surfaces, and incomplete traces replace the explicit representation of territory. It is within this distance that the exhibition constructs its discourse on memory, exile, and belonging. The exhibition unfolds at a time marked by conflict and forced displacement across the entire region. The works thus address the relationship between loss and continuity, seeking images capable of narrating a diasporic condition without reducing it to a simple political document. Abstraction becomes a tool for reconstructing fragments of memory, while the landscape transforms into something mental, mobile, and continually redefined. In many works, home and territory appear as absences rather than presences. Some artists imagine a free and future Palestine, while others instead describe natural spaces progressively reduced by the growth of military and colonial structures. The group exhibition, hosted at the Zawyeh Gallery, brings together fifteen Palestinian artists from different generations and backgrounds. Participants include Nabil Anani, Samia Halaby, Sliman Mansour, Khaled Hourani, and Vera Tamari, along with younger artists such as Yazan Abu Salameh and Ruba Salameh. Through diverse media, the exhibition connects personal experiences and collective narratives, demonstrating how memory can function simultaneously as a refuge and an open wound.

Veronica Azzari - © 2026 ARTE.it for Bvlgari Resort Dubai