Subscribe
Search
ePaper
Newsletters
Subscribe
ePaper
Newsletters
Art market
Museums & heritage
Exhibitions
Books
Podcasts
Columns
Technology
Adventures with Van Gogh
Art market
Museums & heritage
Exhibitions
Books
Podcasts
Columns
Technology
Adventures with Van Gogh
Search
Artist interview
feature

Habits, hair and hardware stores: Afra Al Dhaheri on her artistic inspirations

We meet the artist nominated for the Richard Mille Art Prize

In partnership with
Lee Cheshire
16 March 2023
Share
Afra Al Dhaheri in front of her work Weighing the Line at Louvre Abu Dhabi

Photo: Augustine Paredes – Seeing Things. Courtesy Department of Culture and Tourism, Abu Dhabi. Artwork © the artist

Afra Al Dhaheri in front of her work Weighing the Line at Louvre Abu Dhabi

Photo: Augustine Paredes – Seeing Things. Courtesy Department of Culture and Tourism, Abu Dhabi. Artwork © the artist

Ten artists from across the Gulf have been nominated for the second Richard Mille Art Prize. The full list can be found here.

Work by the artists is on show at Louvre Abu Dhabi until 19 March and the winner will be announced 20 March.

Afra Al Dhaheri’s artwork at the Louvre Abu Dhabi, Weighing the Line, shows fringes of rope hanging from a wall, each one separating into a tangle of split ends by the time it reaches the floor. The similarity to human hair is intentional.

“Hair has a lot of meanings in different cultures,” she says. “I talk particularly from my perspective growing up in the UAE where we [consider] hair to be a private body part that we cover. I question these boundaries of privacy and that is what led me to this work, where I’m looking at cultural constructs and social conditioning. There are invisible boundaries we create and collectively acknowledge their existence.” The curtain of ropes suggests these boundaries and, in other presentations of the work, visitors can walk around and under it.

Al Dhaheri (born in 1988 in Abu Dhabi, UAE) started making art with hair during a residency at Porthmeor Studios in St Ives, Cornwall. She adopted the vivid colours of the Modernists from the St Ives School, painting in blocks separated by strands of her own hair. “They were colourful because of my surroundings. But what I absorbed from growing up in Abu Dhabi was this [more muted, monotone] palette: it’s natural, it makes sense. It led me to start looking for my materials at construction sites and hardware stores. That’s my environment.” The rope she uses is thick and strong and usually used in marine industries.

The work is also a way of taking in the rapid transformation of Abu Dhabi. “Change is traumatic, regardless of whether it is good or bad. We need time to process it,” she says. “I wanted to slow down time in my studio by producing these long process-like pieces. It’s a habitual activity, like my grandmother picking rice. Your mind is not really occupied with anything else. We spend three to four weeks untwisting the rope—but it remembers that it was twisted. It has the capacity to memorise form, just like hair is still wavy after it is unbraided.”

Artist interviewRichard Mille Art PrizeAbu DhabiLouvre Abu Dhabi
Share
Subscribe to The Art Newspaper’s digital newsletter for your daily digest of essential news, views and analysis from the international art world delivered directly to your inbox.
Newsletter sign-up
Information
About
Contact
Cookie policy
Data protection
Privacy policy
Frequently Asked Questions
Subscription T&Cs
Terms and conditions
Advertise
Sister Papers
Sponsorship policy
Follow us
Facebook
Instagram
YouTube
LinkedIn
© The Art Newspaper