The insurmountable limits of illusion

The insurmountable limits of illusion
#Exhibitions
Safwan Dahoul, Dream 273, 2025, Mixed media on wood, 17 × 13 × 5 cm | © Safwan Dahoul

For over thirty years, Safwan Dahoul has constructed his pictorial universe within the same room. Born in Hama in 1961, Dahoul belongs to a generation of artists who traversed the transition between Arab modernism and contemporary practices. In The Eye: An Aperture Into the Soul, presented at the Ayyam Gallery, this space changes nature: the room shrinks, compresses, and becomes a closed structure, almost a mental cell. It is a space almost always monochromatic, devoid of precise references, where bodies and figures seem suspended in a state of silence and expectation. The exhibition continues the long Dream cycle, a series begun in the late 1980s and which has become the core of Dahoul’s research. The new works show figures wrapped up in themselves, often isolated within compressed geometric environments, where any possibility of opening to the outside world seems reduced to a minimum. In this context, the eye takes on a central role: no longer a simple anatomical detail, but the only threshold through which interiority can still manifest itself. The exhibition addresses the moment when the "illusion of freedom" dissolves: while in previous works, the figures could still move within the pictorial space, here they appear contained within insurmountable limits. The result is a painting where psychological tension arises not from explicit narrative events but from a sense of continuous suspension.

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