Ishara Art Foundation recently hosted a talk in Dubai with the UK based artist-composer Haroon Mirza, as part of its current exhibition, ‘Notations on Time’ which features. his ‘Light Work xlix’ (2022). This was Mirza’s first public interaction in the UAE during which he shared with the audience the evolution of his art practice, underpinned by his interest in energy and power in their various forms.
Mirza considers electricity as his primary artistic medium, creating from it visual, sculptural, acoustic, and performative compositions in time and space.
UK-based contemporary visual artist Haroon Mirza. (Photo: David Bebber)
Born in 1977 in London, Mirza has a BA in painting from Winchester School of Art, and MAs in critical practice and theory from Goldsmiths College, London, and in fine art from Chelsea College of Art and Design.
Sabih Ahmed, Associate Director and Curator at Ishara Art Foundation, in his introductory remarks referred to Mirza’s ‘Light Work xlix’ featured on the mezzanine floor of the gallery as a light installation, which is actually quite phenomenal … you’re looking at neon lights on the floor. But the work is actually on the ceiling, a white light effect as calibration of certain frequencies and energies and electricity in a certain way. And that's really what excited us to have Haroon in the ‘Notations on Time’ exhibition.”
“The show is really about how do we experience time? How do we read time? Where do we read time? And how does time get registered in our bodies, in the ecosystem, in machines? And in organic life on the planet as well as on cosmic scales. There’s an interest in various kinds of scales that is both measured in particles and waves.”
Moderated by art critic and editor Jyoti Dhar, the talk offered insights into the ideas, questions, research, and explorations that underlie Mirza’s practice.
Mirza’s work has been exhibited in far corners of the world, including the Gulf, and most recently in Saudi Arabia.
Mirza, in his presentation took the audience through different bodies of work, practice, and an overview of the basic principles as it evolved up to the present.
But then it is also interesting that even a decade ago, Mirza’s installation ‘Falling Rope,’ 2013 (LED, LED controllers, LCD monitor, speakers, media player, and cables) was featured at the Sharjah Biennial 11 in 2013. The work was inspired by a 1907 photograph by Herbert Ponting of Shiraito (literally, 'falling string') Waterfall, in Fujinomiya, with Mount Fuji in the background.
“So you know, I’m not new to the region in that sense, but it’s true that I’ve never really spent time here.”
Recalling the early days, he said. “Even though I am known as an artist who worked with electricity as the primary medium, it took me a while to kind of come to that realization. I thought I was using electronics to make music. I was producing sounds from hacking household objects. And I was layering those sounds and organizing in some way to sort of create these auditory compositions.”
Mirza describes it as a kind of curatorial practice and also a practice of composition. “I like to call it composition in the sense that I’m composing with both visual and acoustic material simultaneously. But one of the key things was working with electricity and radio and things on the electromagnetic spectrum, both in terms of light and electricity, but also sound waves, and kind of manipulating those things and working with it. So I was creating form, and these elements were sort of playing out within space and time.”
Technology was also changing. “LED lighting had started to replace halogen lighting. And from using voltage to control light, electronics came into play to control lighting– through an electronic process called Pulse Width Modulation. And that process was sort of used fundamentally for lots of things… it was also one of the processes used in instruments, in synthesizers, and electronic music. So we got to this point in our sort of technological development where we were using the same electronic process to change lighting but also create sound. So it became like this form that was something more synesthetic … and grew and evolved and takes up many different guises.”
Mirza also showed a solo exhibition of new works at Lisson Gallery in London, entitled |||, forming a constellation of installations around the so-called ‘Holy’ or ‘Divine’ frequency of 111 Hz, which provides a sonic experience that permeates the spaces. Individual works incorporate light, moving image, sound and sculpture, while a living ecosystem deriving from one of Mirza’s solar-panel works ‘powers’ an ant colony and a fungus farm.
“This healing frequency, as it has been described, was something that I got kind of excited or inspired by because it’s an interesting thing to explore. So I started making work with this frequency and including it into narratives and, using as a framework.”
Jyoti Dhar, commenting on Mirza’s work, said: … there’s an evocation of the worldly and otherworldly at the same time that I see kind of unifying a lot of the work.”
“There’s always something otherworldly in everything,” said Mirza. “But then to try and communicate that to everyone else,” is what the art attempts, “a very diluted form of shamanism, speaking from the Western canon.”
Al Arabiya English caught up with the artist to get more insights on how he got attracted to installations using sound, light, and energy sources and their interplay with human beings and Nature.
Obviously, Mirza’s early interest in music has also led to his interest in exploring “the interplay and friction between sound and light waves, and electric current.” He describes his role as a composer who manipulates electricity, and recalled using as household electronics, vinyl, turntables, LEDs, furniture, video footage and existing artworks.
“I was working with electrical signals since my Goldsmiths days, generating light and sound from them but it wasn’t until I started thinking about electricity as a natural phenomenon that I began thinking about it as landscape. Landscape for me is all of the cosmos, including all living and non-living things inside within it. I’ve always been attracted to nature.” What stage were you in your evolution when you pivoted to this mode of practice because you started off as a painter? “I was making landscape painting, or more specifically, seascapes – so ‘waves.’ But after considering sound as another invisible part of the landscape, in trying to represent acoustic space, I began working with objects. But then at Goldsmiths, I realized by using electrical current I could compose with light and sound simultaneously as an aesthetic form. So my interest in waves expanded from ocean waves, to sound waves, electromagnetic waves, and more recently neural oscillations – brain waves.”
Installation view at Islamic Art Biennale Jeddah. (Credit: Diriyah Biennale Foundation)
What are the main themes and inspirations behind your artworks. Do you collaborate or receive feedback from the tech community? “A little bit but not too much… Tech these days seems to be more about digital space or the Metaverse as opposed to the physical world we inhabit. There are of course exceptions such as the microcontroller industry which has also been making leaps and bounds, which I try and keep up with. I guess the developments in Machine Learning (ML) will begin to interface the physical world in a profound way, so I keep up with the narratives around that, but don’t work with AI much anymore.” Mirza has been exhibiting in far corners of the world, including the Gulf, and most recently in Saudi Arabia – Noor Riyadh in 2022, and the inaugural edition of the Islamic Arts Biennale in Jeddah, early this year.
Haroon Mirza: ‘Adam, Eve, Others, and a Meteorite,’ 2023. Granite, basalt, resin, photovoltaic panels, bespoke electronic device, LEDs, audio. Dimensions variable. Installation view at Islamic Art Biennale, Jeddah. (Credit: Diriyah Biennale Foundation)
According to Riyadh Art, Mirza’s ‘Energy for the Sake of Retaining Power’ (Solar Symphony 16) was a new sculptural installation specifically created for the Noor Riyadh Festival.
It follows Mirza’s continued interest in the ‘Dyson Sphere,’ a speculative photovoltaic megastructure that encompasses a star in order to exploit vast amounts of its energy. Mirza presents an arrangement of these photovoltaic panels that channel electricity from halogen lamps to further illuminate a planter populated by the local shrub Syrian Rue, facilitating its growth and photosynthesis. The plants and visitors are simultaneously serenaded by a generative composition of physiologically-stimulating frequencies governed by the electricity flowing through the system.
Haroon Mirza, ‘Dyson Sphere’ (detail), 2022. Courtesy of the artist, Lisson Gallery, and max goelitz. The ‘Dyson Sphere’ was developed for lille3000’s UTOPIA Festival, supported by Maison Ruinart. (Photo: John Varghese)
Mirza’s ‘Adam, Eve, Others, and a Meteorite’ (2023), commissioned by the Diriyah Biennale Foundation, comprises a pair of monumental standing stones resembling the Al-Naslaa rock formation near Taima in Saudi Arabia, in which pictures were carved 4,000 years ago. He has created a celestial clock that responds to the different rhythms of the sun and moon. The first structure, a cube clad in local basalt, lies at an angle out in the open, as if it has just fallen from the heavens. It carries an array of solar panels, power LEDs, and speakers embedded in a second stone that is split in two. These emit a display of sound and light. The duration of this performance changes according to the moon phase, longest at the new moon and shortest at the full moon. In its relationship to the cycles of the moon, Mirza's work reflects on the first marking of time on the ‘hijri’ calendar. Meanwhile, its dependence on solar power parallels the connection between the sun and the timing of ritual prayer. Juxtaposing this reference to prehistoric monuments with cutting-edge technology, Mirza comments on humanity’s ever-evolving quest to understand the movement of the celestial realms and its effects on our lives.
Haroon Mirza, ‘Dyson Sphere’ (detail), 2022. Courtesy of the artist, Lisson Gallery, and max goelitz. The ‘Dyson Sphere’ was developed for lille3000’s UTOPIA Festival, supported by Maison Ruinart. (Photo: John Varghese)
Mirza’s, ‘Dyson Sphere’ (detail), 2022 currently on show at Abu Dhabi’s The NYUAD Art Gallery, as part of ‘the only constant’ exhibition curated by Maya Allison, Executive Director of the Gallery, depicts a living garden, fed by light from solar panels. Mirza visualizes this question: “What if we were to surround the sun in solar panels, and block out the light?”
This exhibition is part of an ongoing series in which curator Allison investigates the concept of landscape as it manifests in contemporary art practice, globally. “I hope my works add to the richness of the way of life in the Arab world,” he said.
Haroon Mirza: ‘Adam, Eve, Others, and a Meteorite,’ 2023. Granite, basalt, resin, photovoltaic panels, bespoke electronic device, LEDs, audio. Dimensions variable. Installation view at Islamic Art Biennale, Jeddah. (Credit: Diriyah Biennale Foundation)
Performance Art has been gaining prominence in the UAE nowadays. Do you think tech installations can enhance such acts and provide a cutting edge? “Absolutely. I hope to come here and present some of my own performance works alongside those of my peers to help establish that engagement.”
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Arabian Saluki Beauty Contest at ADIHEX 2024: A celebration of ancestral elegance
The Abu Dhabi International Hunting and Equestrian Exhibition (ADIHEX) announce the return of the prestigious Arabian Saluki Beauty Contest, a unique initiative aimed at highlighting the significance of purebred hunting dogs and fostering a connection between the new generation and their rich ancestral heritage.
Under the esteemed patronage of H.H. Sheikh Hamdan bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Ruler’s Representative in Al Dhafra Region and Chairman of the Emirates Falconers’ Club (EFC), this iconic event is scheduled from 31st August to 8th September, 2024, at ADNEC Centre Abu Dhabi, celebrating the blending of deep Emirati cultural traditions with cutting-edge innovation and technology across 11 diverse sectors.
A highlight of this year’s event is the Arabian Saluki Beauty Contest. One of the world’s oldest and most revered dog breeds, the Arabian Saluki stands as a symbol of wild hunting and desert traditions in the Middle East. Known for its grace, speed, and intelligence, this distinctive breed has been a faithful companion to the Bedouin people for over 5,000 years, serving as both a hunter and guardian. The Saluki’s agility and loyalty have made it an integral part of hunting and racing traditions, especially within the Arabian Peninsula.
The Arabian Saluki Centre was established in Abu Dhabi in 2001 alongside the Emirates Falconers’ Club, marking the first facility of its kind in the Arabian Gulf region and the Middle East, to revive the tradition of desert hunting using Saluki dogs, a cherished aspect of desert heritage.
ADIHEX was the first cultural event in the Arab region to honour the bond between Man and his loyal companion, which has been by our side for thousands of years. The Arabian Saluki Beauty Contest is a unique initiative designed to promote interest in purebred hunting dogs and to strengthen the new generation’s connection to their ancestral heritage and traditions and to serve as a testament to this unique bond.
With its origin steeped in history, this fascinating dog’s name is believed to be derived from the city of Saluk in Yemen or the Bani Saluk tribe. Renowned for its endurance and elegance, the Saluki can reach speeds up to 75 kilometres per hour, maintaining this pace over distances up to almost five kilometres. The breed is cherished for its unique physical characteristics, including a slender body, deep chest, long legs, and two distinct coat types: ‘Al Hoss’ (smooth) and ‘Aryash’ (feathery).
The Arabian Saluki Beauty Contest, held during ADIHEX, is more than a beauty pageant. It celebrates the essence of the Saluki by focusing on the dog’s personality, skills, reflexes, and sensory response. Unlike typical dog competitions, this contest evaluates the Saluki’s breed characteristics, behaviour, overall appearance, structure, hunting skills, and psychological traits. Judging criteria include the dog’s gait, head, eyes, mouth, ears, coat, colour, and general impression.
The Arabian Saluki Beauty Contest is an integral part of ADIHEX’s mission to preserve and promote the cultural heritage of the UAE and the wider Arab world. This contest not only showcases the beauty and abilities of the Saluki but also plays a vital role in raising awareness about the importance of preserving traditional hunting practices and the Saluki’s role in them.
This year’s competition will feature four categories: ‘Smooth (Hoss) Males,’ ‘Feathery (Aryash) Males,’ ‘Smooth (Hoss) Females,’ and ‘Feathery (Aryash) Females.’ The event is scheduled to take place during ADIHEX 2024, and, per the rules, participants must ensure their dogs are healthy, microchipped, and vaccinated.
The Saluki’s enduring legacy is celebrated through this competition, which draws participants and spectators from across the region and beyond. It provides a platform for Saluki enthusiasts to connect, share their passion, and celebrate a breed that has remained virtually unchanged for millennia, reflecting the diverse hunting landscapes and traditions of the Middle East.
Aside from the alluring Arabian Saluki Beauty Contest, as the largest edition of ADIHEX to date, the 21st edition will showcase thousands of brands across 11 diverse sectors, offering a dynamic platform for new business opportunities and captivating audiences of all ages. This exhibition celebrates the thrill of an adventurous outdoor lifestyle, allowing visitors to explore falconry, hunting, equestrian sports, veterinary products, fishing and marine sports, environmental preservation, cultural heritage, arts and crafts, and the latest in technology and innovation across all the represented sectors.
Sharjah Ruler directs allocation of beach for women in Khorfakkan’s Al Luluyah area
H.H. Dr. Sheikh Sultan bin Muhammad Al Qasimi, Supreme Council Member and Ruler of Sharjah, has ordered the allocation of a 500-metre beach for women in Al Luluyah area of Khorfakkan, providing them with complete privacy. The project will include a service building that includes a cafe, a medical clinic and a prayer room for women. His Highness the Ruler of Sharjah also directed the construction of a pedestrian bridge linking Al Bardi 6 and Al Batha areas in Khorfakkan, to facilitate the movement of citizens, and modifications will be implemented on the internal roads in the Hayawa area.