Installation
13 April 2025

Between a Beach and Slope

Curated by Fatoş Üstek

Part of Alserkal Art Week: A Wild Stitch

Starts 10:00 am

Venue Alserkal Avenue

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Between a Beach and Slope

Curated by Fatoş Üstek

“In the face of the wind,

everything seems

to be the colour of

the storm.”

– From Between a Beach and Slope, Nujoom Alghanem

Between a Beach and Slope is a series of public art commissions inspired by Nujoom Alghanem’s poem of the same title, curated by Fatoş Üstek. The Public Art Commissions reflects on key themes of nature, time, identity, and the evolving landscapes of modern civilization. Drawing from Alghanem’s poetic vision, the works explore how conceptions of home and belonging evolve within changing physical and social environments, particularly through the shifting spaces between the desert, the city, and the cyclical rhythms of nature.

Alghanem’s poetic reflection in her piece for the commissions, which reads “Do not fear the desert; rather fear your heart that may not be spacious enough for its vastness, and your feet that may get lost in its paths,” serves as a metaphor for the tension between rootedness and transience, inviting reflection on the nomadic life and the notion of home. This theme intersects with Kirstine Roepstorff’s engagement with lunar cycles, which further explores how human knowledge, shaped by natural rhythms, intersects with broader narratives of civilization. The moon becomes an anchor for reflection on growth, decay, and renewal, offering a poetic context for understanding how our orientation to time and knowledge forms the core of our collective stories.

Shilpa Gupta’s light-text sculptures add another layer to the commission's exploration of knowledge and language. Her work interrogates how language both represents and obscures human history and memory, using illuminated text to provoke a re-interpretation of everyday spaces and actions. Through this, Gupta delves into issues around visibility, erasure, and the power of symbols in shaping identity and collective memory, particularly in times of control and censorship.

The commission also reflects Dubai’s rapid urbanization, which stands at the intersection of modernity and tradition, as the ancient desert and coastal environments meet futuristic urban development.

Between a Beach and Slope will be presented across Alserkal Avenue, with each work thoughtfully positioned to interact with both the surrounding desert landscape and the urban skyline of Dubai. The layout will invite movement and engagement, encouraging visitors to navigate through various installations while reflecting on the relationship between the works and their environments. The sculptures and installations will be strategically placed to draw attention to the natural elements of sand, light, and space—metaphors for cycles of time, movement, and transformation. These elements will frame the Public Art Commission’s themes, allowing the works to resonate with the changing rhythms of the city, the desert, and the cosmic forces that shape both

Commissioned by Alserkal Arts Foundation.

About the Curator

Fatoş Üstek is an independent curator and writer with over two decades of international experience in contemporary art. She is the author of The Art Institution of Tomorrow: Reinventing the Model (Lund Humphries, 2024) and serves as curator of Frieze Sculpture (2023–2026) and curator of Cascading Principles Expansions within Geometry, Philosophy and Interference, Mathematical Institute, Oxford University (2022-2025).

She is the Co-founder and Director of FRANK Fair Artist Pay, advocating for fair practice in the arts in the UK. Her curatorial expertise spans biennials, exhibitions, festivals, and public art commissions, shaping critical discourse and institutional transformation within the arts.

Üstek’s practice extends beyond exhibition-making, consistently pushing the boundaries of curatorial engagement. She creates synergies for artistic experience in both institutional and non-institutional contexts, expanding the site of encounter to the cityscape and reimagining how audiences engage with contemporary art. Her work blurs the lines between art, architecture, and the public realm, forging new possibilities for cultural dialogue in urban environments.



Still They Know Not What I Dream: Shilpa Gupta

Shilpa Gupta is interested in the interventions, alterations and transgressions that occur across spatial and conceptual boundaries of urgent contemporary concern. Her multi-disciplinary practice comprises a wide array of media and processes, which explore our fragile relationship with identity and expression, as well as the indiscriminate flexibility of nomenclature-based definitions.

In the light sculpture Still they know not what I dream, Gupta explores the nature of media within the context of the hegemonic world – rife with inequity, indiscipline and asymmetry – by weaving together a nexus of sense and cognition, as well as the conscious and the unconscious. Reflecting on issues around freedom in times of control, censorship and surveillance, the presentation of the text in reverse impresses upon the viewer a need for re-interpretation of everyday movements, spaces and functions, claimed via self-agency.

At once, the illumination of Gupta’s poetic message disarms the viewer with its charming sensibility while the light itself disorients the vision, prompting viewers to reconsider their postulation.

Supported by Ishara Art Foundation.



About the Artist

Shilpa Gupta (b.1976) lives and works in Mumbai, India where she has studied sculpture at the Sir J. J. School of Fine Arts from 1992 to 1997.

She had solo shows at Contemporary Arts Center in Cincinnati, Arnolfini in Bristol, OK in Linz, Museum voor Moderne Kunst in Arnhem, Voorlinden Museum and Gardens in Wassenaar, Kiosk in Ghent, Barbican in London, Dallas Contemporary and the Neuer Berliner Kunstverein in Berlin, Bielefelder Kunstverein, La synagogue de Delme Contemporary Art Center and Lalit Kala Akademi in New Delhi. In 2021 she had a survey show at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Antwerp curated by Nav Haq. She presented a solo project at ‘My East is Your West’, a two-person joint India-Pakistan exhibition, by the Gujral Foundation in Venice in 2015.

Gupta’s work has been shown in leading international institutions and museums such as Tate Modern, Museum of Modern Art, Louisiana Museum, Centre Pompidou, Serpentine Gallery, Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo, Mori Museum, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, ZKM, Ishara Art Foundation, Kiran Nadar Museum and Devi Art Foundation.

Shilpa Gupta has participated in 58th Venice Biennale (2019) curated by Ralph Rugoff, Kochi Muziris Biennale (2018) curated by Anita Dube, Gothenburg Biennial (2017) curated by Nav Haq, Berlin Biennale (2014) curated by Juan Gatian, New Museum Triennale (2009), Sharjah Biennial curated by Yuko Hasegawa (2013), Lyon Biennale curated by Hou Hanru (2009), Gwangju Biennale directed by Okwui Enwezor and curated by Ranjit Hoskote (2008), Yokohama Triennale curated by Hans Ulrich Obrist (2008) and Liverpool Biennial curated by Gerardo Mosquera (2006). She has shown in biennales at Auckland, Melbourne, Seoul, Havana, Sydney, Yogyakarta, Echigo-Tsumari, Shanghai, Houston and others.

Her work is in the collection of Tate, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, Centre Georges Pompidou, Mori Museum, M+ Museum, Louisiana Museum, Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, Deutsche Bank, Daimler Chrysler, Bristol Art Museum, Louis Vuitton Foundation, Asia Society, ZKM, Astrup Fearnley Museum, Fonds National d’Art Contemporain – France, KOC Collection, National Gallery of Victoria, National Gallery of Canada, FRAC (France Regional Art Collection), Voorlinden Museum, Art Now, Cincinnati Art Museum, Kiran Nadar Museum, Jameel Arts Center and Devi Art Foundation amongst others.

In 2022, ‘For, In Your Tongue, I Cannot Fit’, an anthology which speaks truth to power, co-edited by Shilpa Gupta and Salil Tripathi was released. In 2021, she has also self-published Artivities, a compilation of art activities for the young. Gupta has co-facilitated ‘Crossovers & Rewrites: Borders over Asia’ at World Social Forum, Porto Alegre in 2005 and ‘Aar Paar’, a public art exchange project between India and Pakistan from 2002-2006.

In 2023, she had a duo solo with Marisa Merz at the MAXXI – National Museum of 21st Century – L’Aquila curated by Bartolomeo Pietromarchi and Fanny Borel and a solo at the Tanya Bonakdar Gallery in New York. In 2024, she opened a major solo at Centro Botín in Santander, Spain curated by Bárbara Rodríguez Muñoz and her solo curated by Ruth Estévez​​ travels from Amant Art Center to the Madison Museum in US.


The Desert of Liwa: Nujoom Alghanem

Nujoom Alghanem’s prolific career encompasses the publication of eight poetry collections and the production of over twelve feature films, including both fiction and documentaries.

Alghanem's poetry is celebrated for its profound exploration of personal and collective experiences, often reflecting on themes such as identity, memory, and the nuances of Emirati culture. Her poetic voice resonates with authenticity, offering readers intimate glimpses into the human condition through evocative imagery and emotional depth.

In her cinematic endeavors, Alghanem continues to shed light on compelling narratives. Her 2014 documentary, Nearby Sky, follows the journey of Fatima Ali Alhameli, the first Emirati woman to enter her camels into local auctions and beauty pageants. The film not only chronicles Fatima's challenges in a male-dominated sphere but also delves into her deep-rooted Bedouin heritage and the passion for camels inherited from her father. Nearby Sky received critical acclaim, winning the Best Non-Fiction Film award at the 11th Dubai International Film Festival as well as Best Documentary at the GCC Film Festival, held in Abu Dhabi in 2016.

Alghanem's interdisciplinary approach seamlessly weaves poetry and visual storytelling, creating works that resonate on multiple levels. Her recent installation, Artifacts of the Current Moments, showcased at Al Jahili Fort, exemplifies this fusion by presenting ceramics alongside poetic narratives, inviting viewers to contemplate the essence of the present moment.

Through her art, Nujoom Alghanem continues to challenge societal norms, celebrate cultural heritage, and inspire both regional and international audiences with her authentic storytelling and poetic expression.



A Passerby Collects the Moonlight: Nujoom Alghanem

A Passerby Collects the Moonlight is a poem by Nujoom Alghanem, first presented as part of the UAE Pavilion at the 58th International Venice Biennale in 2019, where she represented the country with her multidisciplinary installation Passage. The poem reflects Alghanem’s signature style—lyrical, introspective, and deeply rooted in the landscapes of the Gulf while resonating universally with themes of transience, memory, and longing.

Now reimagined as a video and sound installation for Alserkal Avenue’s Yard, A Passerby Collects the Moonlight bridges two of Alghanem’s most significant artistic practices: poetry and filmmaking. The video, created from archival and existing footage, is accompanied by Alghanem’s own voice reading the poem in both Arabic and English. This dual-language presentation will unfold in a carefully timed sequence, with the Arabic recitation played at every odd hour and the English at every even hour, creating a rhythmic, sonic presence in the space throughout the day.

By punctuating the Yard every hour, the installation becomes a contemplative anchor within the public realm—a poetic reminder of the passage of time and the transient nature of human life. The act of collecting moonlight evokes the impossible task of holding onto fleeting moments, a metaphor for memory, displacement, and the search for belonging.
Through this cyclical soundscape and visual presence, the work gestures beyond the local context, resonating with the experiences of uprooted people across the globe. It becomes a quiet reflection on the philosophical condition of those who live between worlds, carrying with them fragments of home, memory, and identity. The installation’s seamless fusion of sound, image, and poetry transcends boundaries—geographical, linguistic, and emotional—offering viewers a meditative experience that is at once intimate and expansive.


About the Artist

Nujoom Alghanem is an Emirati poet, artist, and film director. She was born in Dubai, UAE, 1962 and has published 11 poetry collections in the Arabic language. Her work has been translated to several languages including English, Spanish, French, German, Turkish, Macedonian, and more.

Nujoom is also a renowned filmmaker. She has produced more than 20 films including seven feature non-fiction, short fiction, short documentaries, and art films. Her films have won over 40 regional and international prizes. Her achievements in the arts have been recognized both nationally and internationally. She is the recipient of the Pride of the UAE Medal through the Mohammed bin Rashid Government Excellence Award and the Rashid Award for Scientific Outstanding. In 2019, she was the solo artist of the UAE National Pavilion at the Venice Biennale, and in 2017, she was one of five artists that had participated in the same pavilion.

Alghanem started her professional career in the early 1980s as a journalist for more than ten years and was the head of the cultural department for Dubai and the Northern Offices of Al-Ittihad Newspaper, the first regular publication of the UAE. She then became head of training and human resources development at the Emirates Media Incorporated in Abu Dhabi and finally the director of the new media division at the same organization.

Alghanem was one of the founding members of the Emirates Writers’ Union in 1984 and used to be a board member of Abu Dhabi Authority for Culture and Heritage. In 2010, Nujoom co-founded Nahar Productions, a film production company based in Dubai. Since then, alongside her artistic endeavors, she has worked as a mentor and trainer in art, filmmaking and creative writing as well as a cultural consultant. She is the holder of a master’s degree in film production from Griffith University in Australia and a Bachelor’s degree in video production from Ohio University in the United States.