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Beyond: Emerging Artists (During La Biennale di Venezia) : Maitha Abdalla

Past exhibition
20 April - 22 May 2022
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Beyond: Emerging Artists (During La Biennale di Venezia) : Maitha Abdalla

Past exhibition
20 April - 22 May 2022
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Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Maitha Abdalla, The Wounds in Her Nightmares, 2021
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Maitha Abdalla, The Wounds in Her Nightmares, 2021

Maitha Abdalla Emirati , b. 1989

The Wounds in Her Nightmares, 2021
Oil and Pastel on Canvas
94.5 x 68 cm
37 1/4 x 26 3/4 in
Copyright The Artist
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Further images

  • (View a larger image of thumbnail 1 ), currently selected., currently selected., currently selected. Maitha Abdalla, Tomorrow is Still Another Day, 2021
  • (View a larger image of thumbnail 2 ) Maitha Abdalla, Tomorrow is Still Another Day, 2021

Exhibitions

Maitha Abdalla has produced a body of work across varied mediums which interrogates the gravity and uncertainty of the in-between years of adolescence. Tradition, transformation and paradox are at the core of this work as the individual transitions from youth to adulthood; shifting in outer appearance, social status, and identity. Abdalla perceives this formative and liminal time in our life journey to be a dream-like moment where fantasy and reality conflate. Drawing from regional folktales, faith-based traditions and mythologies, animals are a recurring symbol throughout Abdalla’s practice; most commonly the pig and the rooster.

For Abdalla, the rooster is a creature of purity that embodies forgiveness and innocence while the pig is its opposing force, understood to be sinful in Islam. In the context of her art, this duality represents the moment when one leaves childhood where they harbour no responsibility for their actions into adulthood - a place with newfound responsibility and autonomy.

Inspired by theatre, fantasy, tradition and ritual, there’s always a performative element in Abdalla’s art. Working across mediums, the artist has produced several works on canvas, a series of photographs and an installation for this exhibition. When painting Abdalla typically uses her fingers, a process rooted in intimate expression and the transmission of her energy onto the canvas. She draws from the likes of Francis Bacon, following his unabashed portrayal of the human condition and Paula Rego who captured corrupted folklore through her magical realist paintings. Like Bacon, Abdalla’s palette is often muted pointing to the darkness and multifaceted meanings that her childhood folktales come to embody while her introduction of pastel pink holds kitsch, gendered connotations. Her scenes take place in intimate indoor settings where personal dreams and angsts might take action. The bathroom is the backdrop for her installations and photographs. For Abdalla, it’s a space where cleansing and grooming rituals, as well as self-reflection, take place and where the idea of adolescent transformation is pronounced most heavily with the body laid bare before the mirror.
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