Calendar

Wed 29– Jan. ’25
Sun 04 Jan. ’26
Exhibition
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Tate Modern
London
Gathering Ground

Bringing together artists from Tate’s Collection, Gathering Ground explores the connection between environmental and social justice. Featuring works by Outi Pieski, Abbas Akhavan, Bruce Conner, Zheng Bo, and others, the exhibition honors Indigenous knowledge, queer multispecies relations, and the impact of land displacement. Set in a former power station, it invites reflection on our role in shaping a more just and sustainable future.
External Link

Thu 27– Feb. ’25
Sun 26 Oct. ’25
Exhibition
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YARAT Contemporary Art Space
Baku
Me and the Ark, Me and the Great Flood

YARAT Contemporary Art Space presents Me and the Ark, Me and the Great Flood, a group exhibition inspired by Nasimi’s philosophy. Featuring sculptures, installations, and audiovisual works by Azerbaijani and international artists, the show explores perception, identity, and the blurring of boundaries in the digital age. Through diverse media, the exhibition reflects on inclusion, decolonization, and our responsibility in shaping the world.
Network

Thu 03– Apr. ’25
Sun 02 Nov. ’25
Exhibition
Institute du Monde Arab
Paris
Treasures Saved from Gaza. 5,000 Years of History

Gaza is home to a wealth of archaeological sites from all eras that are now in peril. The IMA is therefore offering an exceptional collection in more ways than one, made up of highly valuable pieces that the vagaries of history have saved from disaster and which reveal the depth of its history, a priceless treasure whose complexity is reflected in this exhibition.
External Link

Thu 03– Apr. ’25
Sun 04 Jan. ’26
Exhibition
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Institute du Monde Arab
Paris
Photographier le patrimoine du Liban, 1864-1970

The IMA Museum is renewing the photographic exhibition at the entrance to its exhibition (level 7): alongside the exhibition “Treasures Saved from Gaza. 5,000 Years of History,” it is offering a rich selection of old photographs from the collections of the Oriental Library of Saint Joseph University in Beirut (@bo.usj), dedicated to the sites and monuments of Lebanon—greatly endangered by Israeli bombardments—and shown for the first time in France.
In addition, the museum is exhibiting for the first time Li Bayrut, a large bronze by Chaouki Choukini created in the aftermath of the explosion in the port of Beirut.
External Link

Sat 05– Apr. ’25
Sat 04 Oct. ’25
Exhibition
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A.M. Qattan Foundation
Ramallah
I shall carve the sun’s words

Featuring a diverse range of artworks—including visual installations, photography, sound pieces, and video works—the exhibition brings together the work of eighteen artists and artist duos from occupied Palestine and the diaspora. Their collective practice expands and liberates the notion of the archive, transforming it from a rigid tool to define identity into a generative space for reclaiming imagination and envisioning the future.
Curator: Reem Shadid
Link

Mon 12– May. ’25
Sat 06 Dec. ’25
Exhibition
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The Palestinian Museum
Birzeit
With My Own Eyes

The exhibition “With My Own Eyes” invites us to immerse ourselves in the living Palestinian timeline through the lens of the French photographer Joss Dray, who describes herself as the “Resistance Photographer.” At a time when standing with Palestine was tantamount to professional suicide, Dray bravely documented the atrocities of occupation, tracing the unwavering Palestinian resistance—both in the occupied land and in refugee camps in Lebanon. Through her lens, she captured moments of truth and defiance, creating a visual testimony of a people’s unyielding struggle, from the Sabra and Shatila massacre to the First Intifada, through the Oslo years, and into the Second Intifada.
External Link

Mon 12– May. ’25
Tue 06 Jan. ’26
Exhibition
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The Palestinian Museum
Birzeit
This is Not an Exhibition

“This is Not an Exhibition”, and certainly not a traditional one neatly displaying specific artworks by their artists. That is beyond our capabilities now; no one can do so, as basic communication with Gazan artists is almost impossible. They, like everyone else in the Gaza Strip, are resisting annihilation in a genocidal war. For months, they have been suffering the misery of displacement, hunger, and cold. They left their homes and studios behind, either destroyed or their destruction imminent, and have consigned their artworks to flames, shelling, and death. As for those who live outside Gaza, their hearts are being torn apart by the agony and martyrdom of their families, our families, and their fates. These considerations have made the mere mention of art seem a luxurious disconnection from reality, and consequently has made it seem preposterous to even think about creating a conventional exhibition.
External Link

Thu 22– May. ’25
Mon 13 Oct. ’25
Exhibition
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Hayy Jameel
Jeddah
Redrawing the Boundaries

“‘Redrawing the Boundaries’ traces the emergence of modern art movements across Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates, collectively referred to as the Khaleej. Rather than outlining a linear progression, the exhibition assembles practices that intersected during formative moments of nation-building, where the tension between tradition and modernity gave rise to distinct artistic vocabularies. The selected artists were not only influential in shaping modernist aesthetic languages but were also central to the founding of art institutions and the cultivation of cultural communities throughout the Arabian Peninsula.”
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