Hassan Sharif, Sharjah Art Foundation

Artforum
February 5, 2018

Hassan Sharif, who died in September 2016, is broadly credited with bringing international art idioms such as Conceptualism to the United Arab Emirates; he was, by all accounts, the center of the generation of Emirati avant-garde artists of the 1980s and ’90s who broke with traditional art forms. Coming a year after his death, this retrospective is situated somewhere between an homage to the artist and an attempt to come to grips with his vastly productive, unruly practice.

“Hassan Sharif: I Am the Single Work Artist” is curated by the Sharjah Art Foundation’s president and director, Hoor Al Qasimi, and includes about four hundred of his thirty-five hundred works. Organized thematically rather than chronologically, the exhibition shows Sharif working through a consistent set of concerns (repetition, systems, chance, consumer detritus, material transformation) from his performances in the ’80s to the “Objects” series, 1982–2016, for which he is best known. It also contains his early work in painting, which he stopped in the ’80s and resumed in the 2000s, as well as the caricatures he drew for local papers before he attended art school.

For his “Objects,” Sharif collected cheap, plentifully available items from the Sharjah souk or local shops—plastic combs, flip-flops, brooms, metal spoons and dishware, wire, nail clippers—and transformed them. He folded aluminum trays and bound them in wire, took cotton wool and glued it into balls, wrapped items in cloth, wove together zip fasteners and the soft tendrils of mops. His urban archaeology, as he termed it, reflects the excess of consumerism, and his work is often read as a response to the rapid changes to life post-oil in the UAE, bringing the labor-intensive, handicraft techniques of Bedouin tradition into contact with the quickly bought and discarded items of mass consumerism.

This exhibition, in focusing on Sharif’s early performance works and systems notations, underlines the more formal aspects of his practice, substantially adding to the understanding of his work and bringing Sharif farther away from the rubric of Emirati artist. His early work was heavily influenced by the systems-centric art of figures in Britain at the time (he studied at London’s Byam Shaw School of Art in the early ’80s), and his performances evince a Fluxus delight in pointlessness as an organizing heuristic. Nylon Rope, 1983, shows him tying together plants in the desert with lengths of cord. Barrel, 1985, entailed Sharif moving an oil drum around Sharjah, taking notes of people’s reactions.

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