ABU DHABI: With its dozens of islands and more than 30 sophisticated cultural venues – from Louvre Abu Dhabi to Manarat Al Saadiyat and Qasr Al Hosn – the Emirati capital of Abu Dhabi is emerging as a leading arts hotspot in the region, and possibly the world. Adding to its roster of cultural projects is Public Art Abu Dhabi.
Launched on March 20, it’s a community-focused initiative, supported by the Department of Culture and Tourism – Abu Dhabi, aimed to enhance the quality of living by dotting the city with various forms of public art that is accessible to all.
“We’ve built the foundations in Abu Dhabi. We’re ready,” Reem Fadda, the director of Cultural Foundation, Abu Dhabi, said in a speech at the initiative’s official launch at the Cultural Foundation. “Public art has always had a place in Abu Dhabi and we have infrastructure to build upon that even further. . . We don’t want you only to come to our sites and museums, we will take art to you. You will walk in the streets of Abu Dhabi and encounter art. You will recognize your city through the lens of art.”
The initiative consists of three main components, which will be spread throughout the capital and demonstrated in the coming years. Manar Abu Dhabi, meaning “lighthouse” in Arabic, will launch in November 2023 as a “year-long light art platform that activates the city and celebrates its natural beauty through light art installations,” explained Fadda. The other element is direct commissions by artists from the region and abroad, whose works will embellish Abu Dhabi’s corniche, parks, schools, roundabouts, tunnels, and historic sites.
There will also be Public Art Abu Dhabi Biennial, taking off in November 2024, which will be co-curated by Fadda. “We are hoping to manifest a lot of public art commissions and also present artists’ work across the city, and we are hoping to able to do that through community engagement,” she said.
As the speeches of the launch came to an end, audience members were invited to step outside of the building to witness the unveiling of the initiative’s first public artwork. Sitting atop of the building is “WAVE,” a digital media work by South Korean collective, d’strict, that has implemented “an anamorphic illusion technique,” according to the press release, whereby, “the 2D installation recreates perpetually surging three-dimensional waves,” It’s a fitting theme, corresponding to the emirates’s pristine azure waters.