Tabari Artspace
Skip to main content
  • Menu
  • About
  • Artists
  • Exhibitions
  • Residency
  • Studio Stories
  • Press
Menu

Artworks

Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Talal Al Najjar SENTINEL V1, 2025 Resin, polystyrene, automotive paint 150 x 50 x 57 cm Talal Al Najjar SENTINEL V1, 2025
Resin, polystyrene, automotive paint
150 x 50 x 57 cm
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Talal Al Najjar SENTINEL V1, 2025 Resin, polystyrene, automotive paint 150 x 50 x 57 cm Talal Al Najjar SENTINEL V1, 2025
Resin, polystyrene, automotive paint
150 x 50 x 57 cm

Talal Al Najjar Emirati-American, b. 1999

SENTINEL V1, 2025
Resin, polystyrene, automotive paint
150 x 50 x 57 cm
59 x 19 3/4 x 22 1/2 in
Copyright The Artist
Sold

Further images

  • (View a larger image of thumbnail 1 ) Talal Al Najjar SENTINEL V1, 2025 Resin, polystyrene, automotive paint 150 x 50 x 57 cm
  • (View a larger image of thumbnail 2 ) Talal Al Najjar SENTINEL V1, 2025 Resin, polystyrene, automotive paint 150 x 50 x 57 cm

Exhibitions

Talal Al Najjar’s Mesh & Mayhem, curated by Salem AlSuwaidi, unravels a terrain where digital architectures and localized memory entwine, forming a fabric stretched thin across speculative futures and fractured realities. The exhibition confronts the way simulation infiltrates geography and biology—where the mesh becomes both structure and rupture, at once a connective tissue and a site of collapse.

Repetition is never mere duplication but a force of excess; here it manifests in the recursive circulation of meshes, video fragments, and 3D surfaces that endlessly reproduce without resolution. In AlNajjar’s hands, repetition builds toward abundance, toward mayhem, toward a psychic overload that mirrors the saturated image-economy of 2025.

Video game engines, with their banalized depictions of violence and their indifference to cultural specificity, loom large as a visual and conceptual language. Al Najjar offers blueprints of cities and avatars of people reduced to playfields, where geopolitical scars are fictionalized into battle maps and rendered as scenery.

Within this frame, Gulf history becomes a mesh of contradictory desires: the drive to codify heritage into monumental form colliding with the unruly excess of digital invention. What emerges is an imagined archive of futures—some absurd, some unsettling—where memory, fantasy, and spectacle converge.

Al Najjar stages this as a psychoscape of abundance: 3D-printed bioplastics glitched with industrial handwork, sculptural forms echoing rust-maps and distorted terrains, video loops replaying like malfunctioning cameos. These works refuse stable meaning. They oscillate between virtual precision and physical disarray, reminding us that every virtual object is a mesh, every repetition an opening onto another fiction.

The exhibition seeks only fracture—where the mesh stretches to its limit, and mayhem becomes the only honest form of truthfulness.

—Curator, Salem AlSuwaidi

Share
  • Facebook
  • X
  • Pinterest
  • Tumblr
  • Email
Previous
|
Next
84 
of  389
Privacy Policy
Accessibility Policy
Manage cookies
Copyright © 2024 Tabari Artspace
Site by Artlogic
Instagram, opens in a new tab.
Join the mailing list
Send an email
View on Google Maps
Artsy, opens in a new tab.

This website uses cookies
This site uses cookies to help make it more useful to you. Please contact us to find out more about our Cookie Policy.

Manage cookies
Accept

Cookie preferences

Check the boxes for the cookie categories you allow our site to use

Cookie options
Required for the website to function and cannot be disabled.
Improve your experience on the website by storing choices you make about how it should function.
Allow us to collect anonymous usage data in order to improve the experience on our website.
Allow us to identify our visitors so that we can offer personalised, targeted marketing.
Save preferences
Close

Join the Tabari Artspace community

Subscribe to discover our programming

 
 
Signup