Hassan Sharif
Hassan Sharif (born 1951) is an artist living and working in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.
Early work
Sharif’s early ‘caricatures’ were printed in the UAE’s nascent newspapers and magazines from 1973–79, and reflected on the political climate of the Middle East in the 1970s as well as the UAE’s rapid urbanisation and commercial globalisation since its formation. By the time Sharif left the UAE in 1979 to pursue a formal art education, he had actively rejected calligraphic abstraction and Arab Nationalism, both of which were the dominant discourse in the region at that time, as well as the ‘negative irony’ of his early cartoons. "I had had some experience from creating the Caricatures but when I went to Britain I wanted to clean that away; to forget or ignore what I had been doing before. [...] I just wanted to be around new ideas and whatever new was happening."[1]
Career
After a foundation year studying in Leamington Spa, Sharif enrolled at the Byam Shaw School of Art (today part of Central Saint Martins) in 1980 and came under the influence of artist Tam Giles, head of the Abstract and Experimental Department. This led to an interest in British Constructionism and particularly Kenneth Martin’s notion of ‘chance and order’, which Sharif developed into his own ‘Semi-system’ way of working – based around arbitrary or over-elaborate systems that are then followed to create works, often on a grid, from ‘Body and Squares’ (1983) to meticulously recording sentences read in an newspaper at points along a journey to Sharjah, to long sequences of black lines showing transformations of a line within a square. "I think of these markings as more of an engagement than an arrangement […] The important thing is the process."[2]
Art as absurdist, process-based activity also fed Sharif’s early performances enacted in London and on return trips to the UAE during summer holidays – jumping in the desert, tying rope between rocks, and discussing art in the toilets of Byam Shaw School of Art with a member of the faculty. "For instance, I speak while my mouth is full of bread. I take a sip of water. I eat more bread, speak, drink some more water, and so on, recording all the sounds. All the while I'm talking about serious things like politics and art, but it's an ironic delivery, imitating politicians and lecturers.[3]
Sharif graduated in 1984 and set about staging the first exhibitions of contemporary art in the Emirates. He founded Al Marijah Art Atelier in Sharjah in 1984, a meeting place for a generation of young artists in the country, and assembled several interventions around the city including ‘One Day Exhibition’ (1985) and an impromptu exhibition in the city’s central market. In this period, Sharif also penned numerous articles in the UAE’s nascent press about the history of art and translated into Arabic excerpts of 20th Century art manifestos and texts (notably about Post-Impressionism, Cubism, Abstract Expressionism, Orphism, Futurism, Dada and Surrealism, Constructivism, Fluxus, Arte Povera, Minimalism and Conceptual Art) so as to provoke a local engagement and show that his work is grounded in a discourse. "I didn’t only make art but I made my audience too. I had to contextualise what I was doing."[4]
In addition to his own practice, Sharif has encouraged and supported several generations of artists in the Emirates. In 2007, he was one of the co-founders of The Flying House, a Dubai institution for promoting contemporary Emirati artists. He is a founding member of the Emirates Fine Arts Society (founded 1980) and of the Art Atelier in the Youth Theater and Arts, Dubai.
Sharif’s works are today held in notable institutional collections including M+, Museum for Visual Culture, Hong Kong; Guggenheim New York, USA; Guggenheim Abu Dhabi, UAE; Centre Pompidou, France; Mathaf Arab Museum of Modern Art, Qatar and Sharjah Art Foundation, UAE.
‘Weaving’
From the early ‘80s, Sharif began creating assemblages from cheap, mass-produced materials or items sourced from the UAE’s markets. With these heaps – often large in scale – Sharif was handing back as artwork the surplus of a recently and rapidly-industrialised UAE. Similarly, "as illustrations of meaningless, taking Duchampian philosophy to heart, they were crafted from commonplace materials, cut, bound or tied together with rope or wire, and thus stripped of their original function."[5] His subsequent assemblages have incorporated coir, rope, copper wire, readymade domestic products, a crutch, newspapers dipped in glue and papier-mache.
The process of bundling these objects together – ‘weaving’, as Sharif calls it – has had extraordinary influence on his broader practice, both in the repetitive gesture of tying to the rudimentary handmade nature of the process. "It’s important for me that art is easy, and technically anyone can do it. In that sense, my work is skill-less. I mean, you don't need special skills to make work that becomes art. I don't want the sculptures to appear to result from virtuosity. I'm not trying to make magic of some kind that would impress an audience as to how the work is created. There are no secrets."[6]
In 2006, Sharif released an essay titled ‘Weaving’, which detailed the ideas that first initiated these Objects, responding to what he calls a "vulgar market mentality that flooded shops with consumer goods".[7]
"Despite the fact that my works are based on a sequential, industrial mode of creativity, they also demolish the sequential autonomy of an industrial product. I inject my works with a realism that exposes this socio-political economic monster, allowing people a chance to recognise the danger of over indulgence in this form of negative consumption."[8]
Sharif has continued to create Objects throughout his career, but has challenged the form throughout, at various times incorporating paintings, works on paper into the assemblage and using the form to create more figurative works. In 2014, Sharif began working with mass-produced images – bundling together printouts, glossy magazines and pages from books, as well as illustrations from a dictionary recreated at an exaggerated scale in iron and ‘woven’ together as assemblage.
Exhibitions
Sharif’s first public exhibition was at Dubai’s Central Public Library in 1976, showing his early ‘Caricature’ cartoons. He has since participated in group shows at, amongst others, Whitechapel Gallery, London, New Museum, New York, and Centre Pompidou, Paris. A retrospective of his career, Hassan Sharif Experiments & Objects 1979-2011, was curated by Catherine David and Mohammed Kazem at Qasr Al Hosn, Abu Dhabi, in 2011. The first Emirati to show in the Mathaf Arab Museum of Modern Art, Doha (2010). Sharif has exhibited in the UAE’s national pavilion at the Venice Biennale twice, in its debut in 2009 (curated by Tirdad Zolghadr) and again in 2015, curated by Sheikha Hoor Al-Qasimi.
Solo exhibitions
2015 Images, Gallery Isabelle van den Eynde, Dubai
2015 Hassan Sharif: The Physical Is Universal, gbAgency, Paris
2013 Approaching Entropy, Gallery Isabelle Van Den Eydne, Dubai
2012 Hassan Sharif, Level One, Paris
2012 Hassan Sharif Works 1980-2012, Sfeir-Semler Gallery, Beirut
2012 Hassan Sharif, Alexander Gray Associates, New York
2011 Hassan Sharif Experiments & Objects 1979-2011, Qasr Al Hosn, Cultural
Quarter Hall, Abu Dhabi
2009 Press Conference, 1x1 Contemporary, Dubai
2003 Sharjah International Arts Biennial, Sharjah
2001 Sharjah International Arts Biennial, Sharjah
1995 Sharjah International Arts Biennial, Sharjah
1986 Emirates Fine Art Society, Sharjah
1985 Emirates Fine Art Society, Sharjah
1976 Caricature, Central Public Library, Dubai
Selected group exhibitions
2015 Adventures of the Black Square: Abstraction in Art and Society 1915-2015, Whitechapel Gallery, London
2015 Sharjah Biennial: The past, the present, the possible, curated by Eungie Joo, Sharjah Art Foundation
2014 Here and Elsewhere, New Museum, New York
2012 18th Biennale of Sydney, Sydney
2012 Paper, Museé d’Art Moderne et d’Art Contemporain, Nice, France
2010 Interventions,Mathaf Arab Museum of Modern Art, Doha, Qatar
2009 ADACH Platform for Visual Arts, La Biennale di Venezia, 53rd International
Art Exhibition, Venice
2009 It’s Not You, It’s Me, UAE National Pavilion, La Biennale di Venezia, 53rd
International Art Exhibition, Venice
2009 Across the Gulf, ARC Biennial
2002 5 UAE, Ludwig Forum for International Art, Aachen, Germany
2000 The 7th Havana Biennial, Havana
1993 1st Sharjah International Art Biennial, Sharjah
1985 One Day Exhibition, Almarijah Art Atelier, Sharjah
1983 -/+ (minus/plus), Al Ahli Club, Dubai
See also
Chinese & Middle Eastern Contemporary Art Expert
Notes and references
- ↑ ‘Make It New’, Harper’s Bazaar Art Arabia; interview with Christopher Lord, July/August 2014
- ↑ ‘Process and Provocation: An Interview with Hassan Sharif’; interview with David Ebony for Art In America magazine, 28 January 2014
- ↑ ibid
- ↑ The National, Anna Seaman, 4 March 2015
- ↑ ‘Hassan Sharif: Experiments and Objects 1979-2011’ by Kevin Jones, Art Asia Pacific
- ↑ ‘Process and Provocation: An Interview with Hassan Sharif’; interview with David Ebony for Art In America magazine, 28 January 2014
- ↑ ‘Weaving’, Hassan Sharif, 2006
- ↑ ibid