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Press Kit Mirage show by Zoulikha Bouabdellah

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All the information about \'Mirage\'Zoulikha Bouabdellah\'s show for the art gallery Sabrina Amrani. Included national and international press cliping

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Page 1: Sabrina Amrani Press Kit Zoulikha Bouabdellah Show

Press KitMirage show by Zoulikha Bouabdellah

Page 2: Sabrina Amrani Press Kit Zoulikha Bouabdellah Show

Bouabdellah explains the motivations that prompted her to develop

Mirage: "In a few months, history has changed its side. It is now being

written in the south, across the Mediterranean, where after Tunisian and

Egyptian revolutions, civil war in Libya and the rising of Syrian people, the

spreading revolution has arrived to Bahrain and Yemen. And, while Moroc-

co launches unprecedented political reforms, Algeria is committed to

strengthening the democratic process. ¿How will all this end up? No one

can say with certainty", says the artist. Her only certainty at the moment is

that, as in every revolutionary process, images will perdure converted into

icons. Bouabdellah found her own: "a picture of a Mirage aircraft of the

Gaddafi’s Air Force". Shot down in flight by rebel forces, the image

showed the aircraft with its beak pointing towards the Libyan soil. "The hit

didn’t come to be seen but it is significant and significative: the dictator is

no longer invincibile", concludes the artist.

About Mirage.

“Is your lovedarling just a mirage?”. 2011

Zoulikha Bouabdellah is French and Algerian although was not born in

France nor in Algeria, but in Moscow, where his parents studied. Her

personal history and her work, developped in the tension between groups

and different cultures that were juxtaposed, crossed and confronted in

time: the family emigrated to France from Algeria when Zoulikha was 16

years old, in the early 90's. At that time, Algeria lived the civil war years.

But before that confrontation, the young Zoulikha already lived the contra-

dictions each day, returning from school. The world of covered women in

which she lived at school became a gallery of sensual Orientalist pictures

and classical sculpture depicting naked women: this collection consisted

of funds that the Museum of Fine Arts of Algiers hidden to the public and

that the artist, the daughter of the center's director, could see every day

before entering his home, located in the very museum.

The contrast and impossible synthesis between a puritan and repressive

outside world, where iconic representations are prohibited and this other,

in which Zoulikha discovered a sexual and aesthetic freedom in art forms,

is one of the key elements expression of the artist, along with his relent-

less pursuit of freedom that transcends religious barriers, political, moral

or formal. Zoulikha Bouabdellah constantly explores the interstices

between "them and us" between the North and South, Europe and Africa,

Christianity and Islam and fundamentally, the gap between men and

women, the gap between what is visible and what is not said, the split

between pleasure and pain.

The artist often focuses on Arab and Islamic contributions in astrology,

mathematics, religion and aesthetics with a disturbing ability to forge new

meanings to expressions and recurring motifs which repeat, relate, over-

lap and reveal new and very modern meanings that intuit the interaction

of cultures. So she did with the series Two lovers, in which the word love,

so often recorded in the Arabic art, becomes two lovers that test all Kama-

The promoter of this new space for contemporary art in Madrid is Sabrina

Amrani. French of Algerian origin, she impulses a gallery project marked

by one word: dialogue, to see and to listen to others. Therefore, the

distinctive signs of the gallery Sabrina Amrani are proposals that invite to

think on the individual, the society or space. "Political or social thoughts:

the artist's own, always individually", Amrani said.

The gallery collaborates with artists José Luis Bongore, Elvire Bonduelle or

Zoulikha Bouabdellah, among others. Established and emerging artists of

many nationalities will come together in her space because, as stated by

the gallerist: "Nor art, much less dialogue, have borders." However, Amrani

acknowledges that the project will pay particular attention to the new

voices that are emerging in the Middle East and North Africa region.

sutra postures.

Another of her most recognized work is Walk on the sky – Pisces, which

won the ArtDubai Abraaj Capital in 2009, the highest prestigious award in

the Arab world. In this ambitious work, a three-dimensional design, Zoulikha

embodied the constellation Pisces from conception of the astronomer

Abd al-Rahman al-Sufi (903-986), whose representations from Ptolemy

studies are the basis of present knowledge in this field. The piece made

use of the polygonal star, one of the symbols most depicted in Arabic art

and architecture throughout the ages, and closed the space with a floor

of mirror: the same that the Queen of Sheba crossed for her encounter

with the King Solomon, that wanted to satisfy his curiosity, not believing

the rumor that her ankles were hairy. This reference, present in the Bible

and the Koran, attached to the contribution to human knowledge of

al-Sufi, reflects the dialogue between cultures present in the work of the

artist.

With these works, the artist ensures is not searching subversion, although

she recognizes that "the transgression is an essential component of

modernity, that allows us to depart from the beaten path and change the

codes to look beyond". However, Bouabdellah’s work seems to look for

the subtlety in the message and a positive view of the underlying conflict.

Page 3: Sabrina Amrani Press Kit Zoulikha Bouabdellah Show

Bouabdellah explains the motivations that prompted her to develop

Mirage: "In a few months, history has changed its side. It is now being

written in the south, across the Mediterranean, where after Tunisian and

Egyptian revolutions, civil war in Libya and the rising of Syrian people, the

spreading revolution has arrived to Bahrain and Yemen. And, while Moroc-

co launches unprecedented political reforms, Algeria is committed to

strengthening the democratic process. ¿How will all this end up? No one

can say with certainty", says the artist. Her only certainty at the moment is

that, as in every revolutionary process, images will perdure converted into

icons. Bouabdellah found her own: "a picture of a Mirage aircraft of the

Gaddafi’s Air Force". Shot down in flight by rebel forces, the image

showed the aircraft with its beak pointing towards the Libyan soil. "The hit

didn’t come to be seen but it is significant and significative: the dictator is

no longer invincibile", concludes the artist.

This image, chosen for the Mirage (I, II, III, IV and V) series and for the

triptyc “Is your love darling just a mirage?”, "brings us back to the ideals of

the revolution". With these pieces, Bouabellah lays down some questions:

"Will they inspire the continuation of the story, or agitated as broken promi-

ses, will they remain in the state of mirages, as a more or less distorted

picture of what was a real ideal? ". In between what is here (the revolution)

and what will arrive (the democracy), the artist has found in the military

aircraft Mirage a perfect image.

In the exhibition designed for Sabrina Amrani, the idea takes the form of a

geometric composition inspired by the Arabic artistic repertoire. As the

concepts that underlines the tradition of the tiles, the Mirage artworks teach

the unattainable in an experience that exceeds the contemplation and push

to interpretations. "Just as the passage of this plane is difficult to discern,

due to the physical phenomenon of refraction searched purposely by the

builders of the aircraft, the shapes of Mirage combines a series of rhythmic

movements that the eye can not see accurately. These are shapes that

attract actors and spectators of the history with this lack of certainty that

characterizes each revolutionary episode", says Bouabdellah.

The installation Algol is a schematic representation of the constellation of

the Perseids. The name Algol comes from the Arabic "Ras al-Ghul", literally

the head of the devil. The ancient Greeks saw in this star the eye of

Medusa, a creature with the head covered by snakes whose gaze turned

to stone anyone who dared challenge it. Composed of flashing and

lighted beacons, Algol is a mythological reading of tyranny, a work in

progress aimed to design the map of dead stars, of fallen dictators by the

wave of change in the Arab world.

The exhibition is completed with Slogan, a deviation “Is your lovedarling just a mirage?”. 2011

Zoulikha Bouabdellah is French and Algerian although was not born in

France nor in Algeria, but in Moscow, where his parents studied. Her

personal history and her work, developped in the tension between groups

and different cultures that were juxtaposed, crossed and confronted in

time: the family emigrated to France from Algeria when Zoulikha was 16

years old, in the early 90's. At that time, Algeria lived the civil war years.

But before that confrontation, the young Zoulikha already lived the contra-

dictions each day, returning from school. The world of covered women in

which she lived at school became a gallery of sensual Orientalist pictures

and classical sculpture depicting naked women: this collection consisted

of funds that the Museum of Fine Arts of Algiers hidden to the public and

that the artist, the daughter of the center's director, could see every day

before entering his home, located in the very museum.

The contrast and impossible synthesis between a puritan and repressive

outside world, where iconic representations are prohibited and this other,

in which Zoulikha discovered a sexual and aesthetic freedom in art forms,

is one of the key elements expression of the artist, along with his relent-

less pursuit of freedom that transcends religious barriers, political, moral

or formal. Zoulikha Bouabdellah constantly explores the interstices

between "them and us" between the North and South, Europe and Africa,

Christianity and Islam and fundamentally, the gap between men and

women, the gap between what is visible and what is not said, the split

between pleasure and pain.

The artist often focuses on Arab and Islamic contributions in astrology,

mathematics, religion and aesthetics with a disturbing ability to forge new

meanings to expressions and recurring motifs which repeat, relate, over-

lap and reveal new and very modern meanings that intuit the interaction

of cultures. So she did with the series Two lovers, in which the word love,

so often recorded in the Arabic art, becomes two lovers that test all Kama-

The promoter of this new space for contemporary art in Madrid is Sabrina

Amrani. French of Algerian origin, she impulses a gallery project marked

by one word: dialogue, to see and to listen to others. Therefore, the

distinctive signs of the gallery Sabrina Amrani are proposals that invite to

think on the individual, the society or space. "Political or social thoughts:

the artist's own, always individually", Amrani said.

The gallery collaborates with artists José Luis Bongore, Elvire Bonduelle or

Zoulikha Bouabdellah, among others. Established and emerging artists of

many nationalities will come together in her space because, as stated by

the gallerist: "Nor art, much less dialogue, have borders." However, Amrani

acknowledges that the project will pay particular attention to the new

voices that are emerging in the Middle East and North Africa region.

sutra postures.

Another of her most recognized work is Walk on the sky – Pisces, which

won the ArtDubai Abraaj Capital in 2009, the highest prestigious award in

the Arab world. In this ambitious work, a three-dimensional design, Zoulikha

embodied the constellation Pisces from conception of the astronomer

Abd al-Rahman al-Sufi (903-986), whose representations from Ptolemy

studies are the basis of present knowledge in this field. The piece made

use of the polygonal star, one of the symbols most depicted in Arabic art

and architecture throughout the ages, and closed the space with a floor

of mirror: the same that the Queen of Sheba crossed for her encounter

with the King Solomon, that wanted to satisfy his curiosity, not believing

the rumor that her ankles were hairy. This reference, present in the Bible

and the Koran, attached to the contribution to human knowledge of

al-Sufi, reflects the dialogue between cultures present in the work of the

artist.

With these works, the artist ensures is not searching subversion, although

she recognizes that "the transgression is an essential component of

modernity, that allows us to depart from the beaten path and change the

codes to look beyond". However, Bouabdellah’s work seems to look for

the subtlety in the message and a positive view of the underlying conflict.

Page 4: Sabrina Amrani Press Kit Zoulikha Bouabdellah Show

Bouabdellah explains the motivations that prompted her to develop

Mirage: "In a few months, history has changed its side. It is now being

written in the south, across the Mediterranean, where after Tunisian and

Egyptian revolutions, civil war in Libya and the rising of Syrian people, the

spreading revolution has arrived to Bahrain and Yemen. And, while Moroc-

co launches unprecedented political reforms, Algeria is committed to

strengthening the democratic process. ¿How will all this end up? No one

can say with certainty", says the artist. Her only certainty at the moment is

that, as in every revolutionary process, images will perdure converted into

icons. Bouabdellah found her own: "a picture of a Mirage aircraft of the

Gaddafi’s Air Force". Shot down in flight by rebel forces, the image

showed the aircraft with its beak pointing towards the Libyan soil. "The hit

didn’t come to be seen but it is significant and significative: the dictator is

no longer invincibile", concludes the artist.

“Slogan”. 2009

of the original meaning of the phrase sung by Umm Kulthum, the Egyptian

grand dame of the Arabic song. This cry of a woman, chained for the love

and eager to regain her freedom, here becomes a revolutionary slogan, a

universal formula for all the oppressed.

Zoulikha Bouabdellah is French and Algerian although was not born in

France nor in Algeria, but in Moscow, where his parents studied. Her

personal history and her work, developped in the tension between groups

and different cultures that were juxtaposed, crossed and confronted in

time: the family emigrated to France from Algeria when Zoulikha was 16

years old, in the early 90's. At that time, Algeria lived the civil war years.

But before that confrontation, the young Zoulikha already lived the contra-

dictions each day, returning from school. The world of covered women in

which she lived at school became a gallery of sensual Orientalist pictures

and classical sculpture depicting naked women: this collection consisted

of funds that the Museum of Fine Arts of Algiers hidden to the public and

that the artist, the daughter of the center's director, could see every day

before entering his home, located in the very museum.

The contrast and impossible synthesis between a puritan and repressive

outside world, where iconic representations are prohibited and this other,

in which Zoulikha discovered a sexual and aesthetic freedom in art forms,

is one of the key elements expression of the artist, along with his relent-

less pursuit of freedom that transcends religious barriers, political, moral

or formal. Zoulikha Bouabdellah constantly explores the interstices

between "them and us" between the North and South, Europe and Africa,

Christianity and Islam and fundamentally, the gap between men and

women, the gap between what is visible and what is not said, the split

between pleasure and pain.

The artist often focuses on Arab and Islamic contributions in astrology,

mathematics, religion and aesthetics with a disturbing ability to forge new

meanings to expressions and recurring motifs which repeat, relate, over-

lap and reveal new and very modern meanings that intuit the interaction

of cultures. So she did with the series Two lovers, in which the word love,

so often recorded in the Arabic art, becomes two lovers that test all Kama-

The promoter of this new space for contemporary art in Madrid is Sabrina

Amrani. French of Algerian origin, she impulses a gallery project marked

by one word: dialogue, to see and to listen to others. Therefore, the

distinctive signs of the gallery Sabrina Amrani are proposals that invite to

think on the individual, the society or space. "Political or social thoughts:

the artist's own, always individually", Amrani said.

The gallery collaborates with artists José Luis Bongore, Elvire Bonduelle or

Zoulikha Bouabdellah, among others. Established and emerging artists of

many nationalities will come together in her space because, as stated by

the gallerist: "Nor art, much less dialogue, have borders." However, Amrani

acknowledges that the project will pay particular attention to the new

voices that are emerging in the Middle East and North Africa region.

sutra postures.

Another of her most recognized work is Walk on the sky – Pisces, which

won the ArtDubai Abraaj Capital in 2009, the highest prestigious award in

the Arab world. In this ambitious work, a three-dimensional design, Zoulikha

embodied the constellation Pisces from conception of the astronomer

Abd al-Rahman al-Sufi (903-986), whose representations from Ptolemy

studies are the basis of present knowledge in this field. The piece made

use of the polygonal star, one of the symbols most depicted in Arabic art

and architecture throughout the ages, and closed the space with a floor

of mirror: the same that the Queen of Sheba crossed for her encounter

with the King Solomon, that wanted to satisfy his curiosity, not believing

the rumor that her ankles were hairy. This reference, present in the Bible

and the Koran, attached to the contribution to human knowledge of

al-Sufi, reflects the dialogue between cultures present in the work of the

artist.

With these works, the artist ensures is not searching subversion, although

she recognizes that "the transgression is an essential component of

modernity, that allows us to depart from the beaten path and change the

codes to look beyond". However, Bouabdellah’s work seems to look for

the subtlety in the message and a positive view of the underlying conflict.

Page 5: Sabrina Amrani Press Kit Zoulikha Bouabdellah Show

Bouabdellah explains the motivations that prompted her to develop

Mirage: "In a few months, history has changed its side. It is now being

written in the south, across the Mediterranean, where after Tunisian and

Egyptian revolutions, civil war in Libya and the rising of Syrian people, the

spreading revolution has arrived to Bahrain and Yemen. And, while Moroc-

co launches unprecedented political reforms, Algeria is committed to

strengthening the democratic process. ¿How will all this end up? No one

can say with certainty", says the artist. Her only certainty at the moment is

that, as in every revolutionary process, images will perdure converted into

icons. Bouabdellah found her own: "a picture of a Mirage aircraft of the

Gaddafi’s Air Force". Shot down in flight by rebel forces, the image

showed the aircraft with its beak pointing towards the Libyan soil. "The hit

didn’t come to be seen but it is significant and significative: the dictator is

no longer invincibile", concludes the artist.

Zoulikha Bouabdellah is French and Algerian although was not born in

France nor in Algeria, but in Moscow, where his parents studied. Her

personal history and her work, developped in the tension between groups

and different cultures that were juxtaposed, crossed and confronted in

time: the family emigrated to France from Algeria when Zoulikha was 16

years old, in the early 90's. At that time, Algeria lived the civil war years.

But before that confrontation, the young Zoulikha already lived the contra-

dictions each day, returning from school. The world of covered women in

which she lived at school became a gallery of sensual Orientalist pictures

and classical sculpture depicting naked women: this collection consisted

of funds that the Museum of Fine Arts of Algiers hidden to the public and

that the artist, the daughter of the center's director, could see every day

before entering his home, located in the very museum.

The contrast and impossible synthesis between a puritan and repressive

outside world, where iconic representations are prohibited and this other,

in which Zoulikha discovered a sexual and aesthetic freedom in art forms,

is one of the key elements expression of the artist, along with his relent-

less pursuit of freedom that transcends religious barriers, political, moral

or formal. Zoulikha Bouabdellah constantly explores the interstices

between "them and us" between the North and South, Europe and Africa,

Christianity and Islam and fundamentally, the gap between men and

women, the gap between what is visible and what is not said, the split

between pleasure and pain.

The artist often focuses on Arab and Islamic contributions in astrology,

mathematics, religion and aesthetics with a disturbing ability to forge new

meanings to expressions and recurring motifs which repeat, relate, over-

lap and reveal new and very modern meanings that intuit the interaction

of cultures. So she did with the series Two lovers, in which the word love,

so often recorded in the Arabic art, becomes two lovers that test all Kama-

The promoter of this new space for contemporary art in Madrid is Sabrina

Amrani. French of Algerian origin, she impulses a gallery project marked

by one word: dialogue, to see and to listen to others. Therefore, the

distinctive signs of the gallery Sabrina Amrani are proposals that invite to

think on the individual, the society or space. "Political or social thoughts:

the artist's own, always individually", Amrani said.

The gallery collaborates with artists José Luis Bongore, Elvire Bonduelle or

Zoulikha Bouabdellah, among others. Established and emerging artists of

many nationalities will come together in her space because, as stated by

the gallerist: "Nor art, much less dialogue, have borders." However, Amrani

acknowledges that the project will pay particular attention to the new

voices that are emerging in the Middle East and North Africa region.

sutra postures.

Another of her most recognized work is Walk on the sky – Pisces, which

won the ArtDubai Abraaj Capital in 2009, the highest prestigious award in

the Arab world. In this ambitious work, a three-dimensional design, Zoulikha

embodied the constellation Pisces from conception of the astronomer

Abd al-Rahman al-Sufi (903-986), whose representations from Ptolemy

studies are the basis of present knowledge in this field. The piece made

use of the polygonal star, one of the symbols most depicted in Arabic art

and architecture throughout the ages, and closed the space with a floor

of mirror: the same that the Queen of Sheba crossed for her encounter

with the King Solomon, that wanted to satisfy his curiosity, not believing

the rumor that her ankles were hairy. This reference, present in the Bible

and the Koran, attached to the contribution to human knowledge of

al-Sufi, reflects the dialogue between cultures present in the work of the

artist.

With these works, the artist ensures is not searching subversion, although

she recognizes that "the transgression is an essential component of

modernity, that allows us to depart from the beaten path and change the

codes to look beyond". However, Bouabdellah’s work seems to look for

the subtlety in the message and a positive view of the underlying conflict.

Mirage artwork.

“Mirage I”. 2011

Page 6: Sabrina Amrani Press Kit Zoulikha Bouabdellah Show

“Is your love darling just a mirage?”. 2011

Page 7: Sabrina Amrani Press Kit Zoulikha Bouabdellah Show

Bouabdellah explains the motivations that prompted her to develop

Mirage: "In a few months, history has changed its side. It is now being

written in the south, across the Mediterranean, where after Tunisian and

Egyptian revolutions, civil war in Libya and the rising of Syrian people, the

spreading revolution has arrived to Bahrain and Yemen. And, while Moroc-

co launches unprecedented political reforms, Algeria is committed to

strengthening the democratic process. ¿How will all this end up? No one

can say with certainty", says the artist. Her only certainty at the moment is

that, as in every revolutionary process, images will perdure converted into

icons. Bouabdellah found her own: "a picture of a Mirage aircraft of the

Gaddafi’s Air Force". Shot down in flight by rebel forces, the image

showed the aircraft with its beak pointing towards the Libyan soil. "The hit

didn’t come to be seen but it is significant and significative: the dictator is

no longer invincibile", concludes the artist.

Zoulikha Bouabdellah is French and Algerian although was not born in

France nor in Algeria, but in Moscow, where his parents studied. Her

personal history and her work, developped in the tension between groups

and different cultures that were juxtaposed, crossed and confronted in

time: the family emigrated to France from Algeria when Zoulikha was 16

years old, in the early 90's. At that time, Algeria lived the civil war years.

But before that confrontation, the young Zoulikha already lived the contra-

dictions each day, returning from school. The world of covered women in

which she lived at school became a gallery of sensual Orientalist pictures

and classical sculpture depicting naked women: this collection consisted

of funds that the Museum of Fine Arts of Algiers hidden to the public and

that the artist, the daughter of the center's director, could see every day

before entering his home, located in the very museum.

The contrast and impossible synthesis between a puritan and repressive

outside world, where iconic representations are prohibited and this other,

in which Zoulikha discovered a sexual and aesthetic freedom in art forms,

is one of the key elements expression of the artist, along with his relent-

less pursuit of freedom that transcends religious barriers, political, moral

or formal. Zoulikha Bouabdellah constantly explores the interstices

between "them and us" between the North and South, Europe and Africa,

Christianity and Islam and fundamentally, the gap between men and

women, the gap between what is visible and what is not said, the split

between pleasure and pain.

The artist often focuses on Arab and Islamic contributions in astrology,

mathematics, religion and aesthetics with a disturbing ability to forge new

meanings to expressions and recurring motifs which repeat, relate, over-

lap and reveal new and very modern meanings that intuit the interaction

of cultures. So she did with the series Two lovers, in which the word love,

so often recorded in the Arabic art, becomes two lovers that test all Kama-

The promoter of this new space for contemporary art in Madrid is Sabrina

Amrani. French of Algerian origin, she impulses a gallery project marked

by one word: dialogue, to see and to listen to others. Therefore, the

distinctive signs of the gallery Sabrina Amrani are proposals that invite to

think on the individual, the society or space. "Political or social thoughts:

the artist's own, always individually", Amrani said.

The gallery collaborates with artists José Luis Bongore, Elvire Bonduelle or

Zoulikha Bouabdellah, among others. Established and emerging artists of

many nationalities will come together in her space because, as stated by

the gallerist: "Nor art, much less dialogue, have borders." However, Amrani

acknowledges that the project will pay particular attention to the new

voices that are emerging in the Middle East and North Africa region.

sutra postures.

Another of her most recognized work is Walk on the sky – Pisces, which

won the ArtDubai Abraaj Capital in 2009, the highest prestigious award in

the Arab world. In this ambitious work, a three-dimensional design, Zoulikha

embodied the constellation Pisces from conception of the astronomer

Abd al-Rahman al-Sufi (903-986), whose representations from Ptolemy

studies are the basis of present knowledge in this field. The piece made

use of the polygonal star, one of the symbols most depicted in Arabic art

and architecture throughout the ages, and closed the space with a floor

of mirror: the same that the Queen of Sheba crossed for her encounter

with the King Solomon, that wanted to satisfy his curiosity, not believing

the rumor that her ankles were hairy. This reference, present in the Bible

and the Koran, attached to the contribution to human knowledge of

al-Sufi, reflects the dialogue between cultures present in the work of the

artist.

With these works, the artist ensures is not searching subversion, although

she recognizes that "the transgression is an essential component of

modernity, that allows us to depart from the beaten path and change the

codes to look beyond". However, Bouabdellah’s work seems to look for

the subtlety in the message and a positive view of the underlying conflict.

“Zelige”. 2011

“Mirage I”. 2011

“Mirage II”. 2011

Page 8: Sabrina Amrani Press Kit Zoulikha Bouabdellah Show

Bouabdellah explains the motivations that prompted her to develop

Mirage: "In a few months, history has changed its side. It is now being

written in the south, across the Mediterranean, where after Tunisian and

Egyptian revolutions, civil war in Libya and the rising of Syrian people, the

spreading revolution has arrived to Bahrain and Yemen. And, while Moroc-

co launches unprecedented political reforms, Algeria is committed to

strengthening the democratic process. ¿How will all this end up? No one

can say with certainty", says the artist. Her only certainty at the moment is

that, as in every revolutionary process, images will perdure converted into

icons. Bouabdellah found her own: "a picture of a Mirage aircraft of the

Gaddafi’s Air Force". Shot down in flight by rebel forces, the image

showed the aircraft with its beak pointing towards the Libyan soil. "The hit

didn’t come to be seen but it is significant and significative: the dictator is

no longer invincibile", concludes the artist.

Zoulikha Bouabdellah is French and Algerian although was not born in

France nor in Algeria, but in Moscow, where his parents studied. Her

personal history and her work, developped in the tension between groups

and different cultures that were juxtaposed, crossed and confronted in

time: the family emigrated to France from Algeria when Zoulikha was 16

years old, in the early 90's. At that time, Algeria lived the civil war years.

But before that confrontation, the young Zoulikha already lived the contra-

dictions each day, returning from school. The world of covered women in

which she lived at school became a gallery of sensual Orientalist pictures

and classical sculpture depicting naked women: this collection consisted

of funds that the Museum of Fine Arts of Algiers hidden to the public and

that the artist, the daughter of the center's director, could see every day

before entering his home, located in the very museum.

The contrast and impossible synthesis between a puritan and repressive

outside world, where iconic representations are prohibited and this other,

in which Zoulikha discovered a sexual and aesthetic freedom in art forms,

is one of the key elements expression of the artist, along with his relent-

less pursuit of freedom that transcends religious barriers, political, moral

or formal. Zoulikha Bouabdellah constantly explores the interstices

between "them and us" between the North and South, Europe and Africa,

Christianity and Islam and fundamentally, the gap between men and

women, the gap between what is visible and what is not said, the split

between pleasure and pain.

The artist often focuses on Arab and Islamic contributions in astrology,

mathematics, religion and aesthetics with a disturbing ability to forge new

meanings to expressions and recurring motifs which repeat, relate, over-

lap and reveal new and very modern meanings that intuit the interaction

of cultures. So she did with the series Two lovers, in which the word love,

so often recorded in the Arabic art, becomes two lovers that test all Kama-

The promoter of this new space for contemporary art in Madrid is Sabrina

Amrani. French of Algerian origin, she impulses a gallery project marked

by one word: dialogue, to see and to listen to others. Therefore, the

distinctive signs of the gallery Sabrina Amrani are proposals that invite to

think on the individual, the society or space. "Political or social thoughts:

the artist's own, always individually", Amrani said.

The gallery collaborates with artists José Luis Bongore, Elvire Bonduelle or

Zoulikha Bouabdellah, among others. Established and emerging artists of

many nationalities will come together in her space because, as stated by

the gallerist: "Nor art, much less dialogue, have borders." However, Amrani

acknowledges that the project will pay particular attention to the new

voices that are emerging in the Middle East and North Africa region.

sutra postures.

Another of her most recognized work is Walk on the sky – Pisces, which

won the ArtDubai Abraaj Capital in 2009, the highest prestigious award in

the Arab world. In this ambitious work, a three-dimensional design, Zoulikha

embodied the constellation Pisces from conception of the astronomer

Abd al-Rahman al-Sufi (903-986), whose representations from Ptolemy

studies are the basis of present knowledge in this field. The piece made

use of the polygonal star, one of the symbols most depicted in Arabic art

and architecture throughout the ages, and closed the space with a floor

of mirror: the same that the Queen of Sheba crossed for her encounter

with the King Solomon, that wanted to satisfy his curiosity, not believing

the rumor that her ankles were hairy. This reference, present in the Bible

and the Koran, attached to the contribution to human knowledge of

al-Sufi, reflects the dialogue between cultures present in the work of the

artist.

With these works, the artist ensures is not searching subversion, although

she recognizes that "the transgression is an essential component of

modernity, that allows us to depart from the beaten path and change the

codes to look beyond". However, Bouabdellah’s work seems to look for

the subtlety in the message and a positive view of the underlying conflict.

“Mirage IV”. 2011

Page 9: Sabrina Amrani Press Kit Zoulikha Bouabdellah Show

“Mirage V”. 2011

Page 10: Sabrina Amrani Press Kit Zoulikha Bouabdellah Show

“Mirage V”. 2011

Too Many Mirages I. 2011

Too Many Mirages III. 2011 Too Many Mirages IV. 2011

Too Many Mirages V. 201 Too Many Mirages VI. 2011

Too Many Mirages II. 2011

Page 11: Sabrina Amrani Press Kit Zoulikha Bouabdellah Show

Too Many Mirages VII. 2011

Too Many Mirages IX. 2011

Too Many Mirages VIII. 2011

Page 12: Sabrina Amrani Press Kit Zoulikha Bouabdellah Show

‘Mirage’ in press.

Babelia. El País. 10th June 2011

Page 13: Sabrina Amrani Press Kit Zoulikha Bouabdellah Show

Babelia. El País. 11th June 2011

Page 14: Sabrina Amrani Press Kit Zoulikha Bouabdellah Show

The International Herald Tribune. 17th June 2011

Page 15: Sabrina Amrani Press Kit Zoulikha Bouabdellah Show

Metrópoli. El Mundo. 17th June 2011

Page 16: Sabrina Amrani Press Kit Zoulikha Bouabdellah Show

Bouabdellah explains the motivations that prompted her to develop

Mirage: "In a few months, history has changed its side. It is now being

written in the south, across the Mediterranean, where after Tunisian and

Egyptian revolutions, civil war in Libya and the rising of Syrian people, the

spreading revolution has arrived to Bahrain and Yemen. And, while Moroc-

co launches unprecedented political reforms, Algeria is committed to

strengthening the democratic process. ¿How will all this end up? No one

can say with certainty", says the artist. Her only certainty at the moment is

that, as in every revolutionary process, images will perdure converted into

icons. Bouabdellah found her own: "a picture of a Mirage aircraft of the

Gaddafi’s Air Force". Shot down in flight by rebel forces, the image

showed the aircraft with its beak pointing towards the Libyan soil. "The hit

didn’t come to be seen but it is significant and significative: the dictator is

no longer invincibile", concludes the artist.

Zoulikha Bouabdellah is French and Algerian although was not born in

France nor in Algeria, but in Moscow, where his parents studied. Her

personal history and her work, developped in the tension between groups

and different cultures that were juxtaposed, crossed and confronted in

time: the family emigrated to France from Algeria when Zoulikha was 16

years old, in the early 90's. At that time, Algeria lived the civil war years.

But before that confrontation, the young Zoulikha already lived the contra-

dictions each day, returning from school. The world of covered women in

which she lived at school became a gallery of sensual Orientalist pictures

and classical sculpture depicting naked women: this collection consisted

of funds that the Museum of Fine Arts of Algiers hidden to the public and

that the artist, the daughter of the center's director, could see every day

before entering his home, located in the very museum.

The contrast and impossible synthesis between a puritan and repressive

outside world, where iconic representations are prohibited and this other,

in which Zoulikha discovered a sexual and aesthetic freedom in art forms,

is one of the key elements expression of the artist, along with his relent-

less pursuit of freedom that transcends religious barriers, political, moral

or formal. Zoulikha Bouabdellah constantly explores the interstices

between "them and us" between the North and South, Europe and Africa,

Christianity and Islam and fundamentally, the gap between men and

women, the gap between what is visible and what is not said, the split

between pleasure and pain.

The artist often focuses on Arab and Islamic contributions in astrology,

mathematics, religion and aesthetics with a disturbing ability to forge new

meanings to expressions and recurring motifs which repeat, relate, over-

lap and reveal new and very modern meanings that intuit the interaction

of cultures. So she did with the series Two lovers, in which the word love,

so often recorded in the Arabic art, becomes two lovers that test all Kama-

About ZoulikhaBouabdellah.

The promoter of this new space for contemporary art in Madrid is Sabrina

Amrani. French of Algerian origin, she impulses a gallery project marked

by one word: dialogue, to see and to listen to others. Therefore, the

distinctive signs of the gallery Sabrina Amrani are proposals that invite to

think on the individual, the society or space. "Political or social thoughts:

the artist's own, always individually", Amrani said.

The gallery collaborates with artists José Luis Bongore, Elvire Bonduelle or

Zoulikha Bouabdellah, among others. Established and emerging artists of

many nationalities will come together in her space because, as stated by

the gallerist: "Nor art, much less dialogue, have borders." However, Amrani

acknowledges that the project will pay particular attention to the new

voices that are emerging in the Middle East and North Africa region.

sutra postures.

Another of her most recognized work is Walk on the sky – Pisces, which

won the ArtDubai Abraaj Capital in 2009, the highest prestigious award in

the Arab world. In this ambitious work, a three-dimensional design, Zoulikha

embodied the constellation Pisces from conception of the astronomer

Abd al-Rahman al-Sufi (903-986), whose representations from Ptolemy

studies are the basis of present knowledge in this field. The piece made

use of the polygonal star, one of the symbols most depicted in Arabic art

and architecture throughout the ages, and closed the space with a floor

of mirror: the same that the Queen of Sheba crossed for her encounter

with the King Solomon, that wanted to satisfy his curiosity, not believing

the rumor that her ankles were hairy. This reference, present in the Bible

and the Koran, attached to the contribution to human knowledge of

al-Sufi, reflects the dialogue between cultures present in the work of the

artist.

With these works, the artist ensures is not searching subversion, although

she recognizes that "the transgression is an essential component of

modernity, that allows us to depart from the beaten path and change the

codes to look beyond". However, Bouabdellah’s work seems to look for

the subtlety in the message and a positive view of the underlying conflict.

Page 17: Sabrina Amrani Press Kit Zoulikha Bouabdellah Show

Bouabdellah explains the motivations that prompted her to develop

Mirage: "In a few months, history has changed its side. It is now being

written in the south, across the Mediterranean, where after Tunisian and

Egyptian revolutions, civil war in Libya and the rising of Syrian people, the

spreading revolution has arrived to Bahrain and Yemen. And, while Moroc-

co launches unprecedented political reforms, Algeria is committed to

strengthening the democratic process. ¿How will all this end up? No one

can say with certainty", says the artist. Her only certainty at the moment is

that, as in every revolutionary process, images will perdure converted into

icons. Bouabdellah found her own: "a picture of a Mirage aircraft of the

Gaddafi’s Air Force". Shot down in flight by rebel forces, the image

showed the aircraft with its beak pointing towards the Libyan soil. "The hit

didn’t come to be seen but it is significant and significative: the dictator is

no longer invincibile", concludes the artist.

Zoulikha Bouabdellah is French and Algerian although was not born in

France nor in Algeria, but in Moscow, where his parents studied. Her

personal history and her work, developped in the tension between groups

and different cultures that were juxtaposed, crossed and confronted in

time: the family emigrated to France from Algeria when Zoulikha was 16

years old, in the early 90's. At that time, Algeria lived the civil war years.

But before that confrontation, the young Zoulikha already lived the contra-

dictions each day, returning from school. The world of covered women in

which she lived at school became a gallery of sensual Orientalist pictures

and classical sculpture depicting naked women: this collection consisted

of funds that the Museum of Fine Arts of Algiers hidden to the public and

that the artist, the daughter of the center's director, could see every day

before entering his home, located in the very museum.

The contrast and impossible synthesis between a puritan and repressive

outside world, where iconic representations are prohibited and this other,

in which Zoulikha discovered a sexual and aesthetic freedom in art forms,

is one of the key elements expression of the artist, along with his relent-

less pursuit of freedom that transcends religious barriers, political, moral

or formal. Zoulikha Bouabdellah constantly explores the interstices

between "them and us" between the North and South, Europe and Africa,

Christianity and Islam and fundamentally, the gap between men and

women, the gap between what is visible and what is not said, the split

between pleasure and pain.

The artist often focuses on Arab and Islamic contributions in astrology,

mathematics, religion and aesthetics with a disturbing ability to forge new

meanings to expressions and recurring motifs which repeat, relate, over-

lap and reveal new and very modern meanings that intuit the interaction

of cultures. So she did with the series Two lovers, in which the word love,

so often recorded in the Arabic art, becomes two lovers that test all Kama-

The promoter of this new space for contemporary art in Madrid is Sabrina

Amrani. French of Algerian origin, she impulses a gallery project marked

by one word: dialogue, to see and to listen to others. Therefore, the

distinctive signs of the gallery Sabrina Amrani are proposals that invite to

think on the individual, the society or space. "Political or social thoughts:

the artist's own, always individually", Amrani said.

The gallery collaborates with artists José Luis Bongore, Elvire Bonduelle or

Zoulikha Bouabdellah, among others. Established and emerging artists of

many nationalities will come together in her space because, as stated by

the gallerist: "Nor art, much less dialogue, have borders." However, Amrani

acknowledges that the project will pay particular attention to the new

voices that are emerging in the Middle East and North Africa region.

sutra postures.

Another of her most recognized work is Walk on the sky – Pisces, which

won the ArtDubai Abraaj Capital in 2009, the highest prestigious award in

the Arab world. In this ambitious work, a three-dimensional design, Zoulikha

“Two Lovers”. 2010

embodied the constellation Pisces from conception of the astronomer

Abd al-Rahman al-Sufi (903-986), whose representations from Ptolemy

studies are the basis of present knowledge in this field. The piece made

use of the polygonal star, one of the symbols most depicted in Arabic art

and architecture throughout the ages, and closed the space with a floor

of mirror: the same that the Queen of Sheba crossed for her encounter

with the King Solomon, that wanted to satisfy his curiosity, not believing

the rumor that her ankles were hairy. This reference, present in the Bible

and the Koran, attached to the contribution to human knowledge of

al-Sufi, reflects the dialogue between cultures present in the work of the

artist.

With these works, the artist ensures is not searching subversion, although

she recognizes that "the transgression is an essential component of

modernity, that allows us to depart from the beaten path and change the

codes to look beyond". However, Bouabdellah’s work seems to look for

the subtlety in the message and a positive view of the underlying conflict.

Page 18: Sabrina Amrani Press Kit Zoulikha Bouabdellah Show

Bouabdellah explains the motivations that prompted her to develop

Mirage: "In a few months, history has changed its side. It is now being

written in the south, across the Mediterranean, where after Tunisian and

Egyptian revolutions, civil war in Libya and the rising of Syrian people, the

spreading revolution has arrived to Bahrain and Yemen. And, while Moroc-

co launches unprecedented political reforms, Algeria is committed to

strengthening the democratic process. ¿How will all this end up? No one

can say with certainty", says the artist. Her only certainty at the moment is

that, as in every revolutionary process, images will perdure converted into

icons. Bouabdellah found her own: "a picture of a Mirage aircraft of the

Gaddafi’s Air Force". Shot down in flight by rebel forces, the image

showed the aircraft with its beak pointing towards the Libyan soil. "The hit

didn’t come to be seen but it is significant and significative: the dictator is

no longer invincibile", concludes the artist.

Zoulikha Bouabdellah is French and Algerian although was not born in

France nor in Algeria, but in Moscow, where his parents studied. Her

personal history and her work, developped in the tension between groups

and different cultures that were juxtaposed, crossed and confronted in

time: the family emigrated to France from Algeria when Zoulikha was 16

years old, in the early 90's. At that time, Algeria lived the civil war years.

But before that confrontation, the young Zoulikha already lived the contra-

dictions each day, returning from school. The world of covered women in

which she lived at school became a gallery of sensual Orientalist pictures

and classical sculpture depicting naked women: this collection consisted

of funds that the Museum of Fine Arts of Algiers hidden to the public and

that the artist, the daughter of the center's director, could see every day

before entering his home, located in the very museum.

The contrast and impossible synthesis between a puritan and repressive

outside world, where iconic representations are prohibited and this other,

in which Zoulikha discovered a sexual and aesthetic freedom in art forms,

is one of the key elements expression of the artist, along with his relent-

less pursuit of freedom that transcends religious barriers, political, moral

or formal. Zoulikha Bouabdellah constantly explores the interstices

between "them and us" between the North and South, Europe and Africa,

Christianity and Islam and fundamentally, the gap between men and

women, the gap between what is visible and what is not said, the split

between pleasure and pain.

The artist often focuses on Arab and Islamic contributions in astrology,

mathematics, religion and aesthetics with a disturbing ability to forge new

meanings to expressions and recurring motifs which repeat, relate, over-

lap and reveal new and very modern meanings that intuit the interaction

of cultures. So she did with the series Two lovers, in which the word love,

so often recorded in the Arabic art, becomes two lovers that test all Kama-

The promoter of this new space for contemporary art in Madrid is Sabrina

Amrani. French of Algerian origin, she impulses a gallery project marked

by one word: dialogue, to see and to listen to others. Therefore, the

distinctive signs of the gallery Sabrina Amrani are proposals that invite to

think on the individual, the society or space. "Political or social thoughts:

the artist's own, always individually", Amrani said.

The gallery collaborates with artists José Luis Bongore, Elvire Bonduelle or

Zoulikha Bouabdellah, among others. Established and emerging artists of

many nationalities will come together in her space because, as stated by

the gallerist: "Nor art, much less dialogue, have borders." However, Amrani

acknowledges that the project will pay particular attention to the new

voices that are emerging in the Middle East and North Africa region.

sutra postures.

Another of her most recognized work is Walk on the sky – Pisces, which

won the ArtDubai Abraaj Capital in 2009, the highest prestigious award in

the Arab world. In this ambitious work, a three-dimensional design, Zoulikha

“Two Lovers”. 2010

embodied the constellation Pisces from conception of the astronomer

Abd al-Rahman al-Sufi (903-986), whose representations from Ptolemy

studies are the basis of present knowledge in this field. The piece made

use of the polygonal star, one of the symbols most depicted in Arabic art

and architecture throughout the ages, and closed the space with a floor

of mirror: the same that the Queen of Sheba crossed for her encounter

“Walk on the sky -Pisces”. 2009

with the King Solomon, that wanted to satisfy his curiosity, not believing

the rumor that her ankles were hairy. This reference, present in the Bible

and the Koran, attached to the contribution to human knowledge of

al-Sufi, reflects the dialogue between cultures present in the work of the

artist.

With these works, the artist ensures is not searching subversion, although

she recognizes that "the transgression is an essential component of

modernity, that allows us to depart from the beaten path and change the

codes to look beyond". However, Bouabdellah’s work seems to look for

the subtlety in the message and a positive view of the underlying conflict.

Page 19: Sabrina Amrani Press Kit Zoulikha Bouabdellah Show

Bouabdellah explains the motivations that prompted her to develop

Mirage: "In a few months, history has changed its side. It is now being

written in the south, across the Mediterranean, where after Tunisian and

Egyptian revolutions, civil war in Libya and the rising of Syrian people, the

spreading revolution has arrived to Bahrain and Yemen. And, while Moroc-

co launches unprecedented political reforms, Algeria is committed to

strengthening the democratic process. ¿How will all this end up? No one

can say with certainty", says the artist. Her only certainty at the moment is

that, as in every revolutionary process, images will perdure converted into

icons. Bouabdellah found her own: "a picture of a Mirage aircraft of the

Gaddafi’s Air Force". Shot down in flight by rebel forces, the image

showed the aircraft with its beak pointing towards the Libyan soil. "The hit

didn’t come to be seen but it is significant and significative: the dictator is

no longer invincibile", concludes the artist.

Zoulikha Bouabdellah is French and Algerian although was not born in

France nor in Algeria, but in Moscow, where his parents studied. Her

personal history and her work, developped in the tension between groups

and different cultures that were juxtaposed, crossed and confronted in

time: the family emigrated to France from Algeria when Zoulikha was 16

years old, in the early 90's. At that time, Algeria lived the civil war years.

But before that confrontation, the young Zoulikha already lived the contra-

dictions each day, returning from school. The world of covered women in

which she lived at school became a gallery of sensual Orientalist pictures

and classical sculpture depicting naked women: this collection consisted

of funds that the Museum of Fine Arts of Algiers hidden to the public and

that the artist, the daughter of the center's director, could see every day

before entering his home, located in the very museum.

The contrast and impossible synthesis between a puritan and repressive

outside world, where iconic representations are prohibited and this other,

in which Zoulikha discovered a sexual and aesthetic freedom in art forms,

is one of the key elements expression of the artist, along with his relent-

less pursuit of freedom that transcends religious barriers, political, moral

or formal. Zoulikha Bouabdellah constantly explores the interstices

between "them and us" between the North and South, Europe and Africa,

Christianity and Islam and fundamentally, the gap between men and

women, the gap between what is visible and what is not said, the split

between pleasure and pain.

The artist often focuses on Arab and Islamic contributions in astrology,

mathematics, religion and aesthetics with a disturbing ability to forge new

meanings to expressions and recurring motifs which repeat, relate, over-

lap and reveal new and very modern meanings that intuit the interaction

of cultures. So she did with the series Two lovers, in which the word love,

so often recorded in the Arabic art, becomes two lovers that test all Kama-

The promoter of this new space for contemporary art in Madrid is Sabrina

Amrani. French of Algerian origin, she impulses a gallery project marked

by one word: dialogue, to see and to listen to others. Therefore, the

distinctive signs of the gallery Sabrina Amrani are proposals that invite to

think on the individual, the society or space. "Political or social thoughts:

the artist's own, always individually", Amrani said.

The gallery collaborates with artists José Luis Bongore, Elvire Bonduelle or

Zoulikha Bouabdellah, among others. Established and emerging artists of

many nationalities will come together in her space because, as stated by

the gallerist: "Nor art, much less dialogue, have borders." However, Amrani

acknowledges that the project will pay particular attention to the new

voices that are emerging in the Middle East and North Africa region.

sutra postures.

Another of her most recognized work is Walk on the sky – Pisces, which

won the ArtDubai Abraaj Capital in 2009, the highest prestigious award in

the Arab world. In this ambitious work, a three-dimensional design, Zoulikha

embodied the constellation Pisces from conception of the astronomer

Abd al-Rahman al-Sufi (903-986), whose representations from Ptolemy

studies are the basis of present knowledge in this field. The piece made

use of the polygonal star, one of the symbols most depicted in Arabic art

and architecture throughout the ages, and closed the space with a floor

of mirror: the same that the Queen of Sheba crossed for her encounter

“Walk on the sky -Pisces”. 2009

with the King Solomon, that wanted to satisfy his curiosity, not believing

the rumor that her ankles were hairy. This reference, present in the Bible

and the Koran, attached to the contribution to human knowledge of

al-Sufi, reflects the dialogue between cultures present in the work of the

artist.

With these works, the artist ensures is not searching subversion, although

she recognizes that "the transgression is an essential component of

modernity, that allows us to depart from the beaten path and change the

codes to look beyond". However, Bouabdellah’s work seems to look for

the subtlety in the message and a positive view of the underlying conflict.

Page 20: Sabrina Amrani Press Kit Zoulikha Bouabdellah Show

Selected artwork.

“Love - Yellow to blue”. 2009

“Love - Red to blue”. 2009

Page 21: Sabrina Amrani Press Kit Zoulikha Bouabdellah Show

“Love - Yellow to blue”. 2009

“Love - Red to blue”. 2009

“Le Rouge et noir”. 2008

Page 22: Sabrina Amrani Press Kit Zoulikha Bouabdellah Show

“Silence bleu”. 2009

Page 23: Sabrina Amrani Press Kit Zoulikha Bouabdellah Show

Bouabdellah explains the motivations that prompted her to develop

Mirage: "In a few months, history has changed its side. It is now being

written in the south, across the Mediterranean, where after Tunisian and

Egyptian revolutions, civil war in Libya and the rising of Syrian people, the

spreading revolution has arrived to Bahrain and Yemen. And, while Moroc-

co launches unprecedented political reforms, Algeria is committed to

strengthening the democratic process. ¿How will all this end up? No one

can say with certainty", says the artist. Her only certainty at the moment is

that, as in every revolutionary process, images will perdure converted into

icons. Bouabdellah found her own: "a picture of a Mirage aircraft of the

Gaddafi’s Air Force". Shot down in flight by rebel forces, the image

showed the aircraft with its beak pointing towards the Libyan soil. "The hit

didn’t come to be seen but it is significant and significative: the dictator is

no longer invincibile", concludes the artist.

Zoulikha Bouabdellah is French and Algerian although was not born in

France nor in Algeria, but in Moscow, where his parents studied. Her

personal history and her work, developped in the tension between groups

and different cultures that were juxtaposed, crossed and confronted in

time: the family emigrated to France from Algeria when Zoulikha was 16

years old, in the early 90's. At that time, Algeria lived the civil war years.

But before that confrontation, the young Zoulikha already lived the contra-

dictions each day, returning from school. The world of covered women in

which she lived at school became a gallery of sensual Orientalist pictures

and classical sculpture depicting naked women: this collection consisted

of funds that the Museum of Fine Arts of Algiers hidden to the public and

that the artist, the daughter of the center's director, could see every day

before entering his home, located in the very museum.

The contrast and impossible synthesis between a puritan and repressive

outside world, where iconic representations are prohibited and this other,

in which Zoulikha discovered a sexual and aesthetic freedom in art forms,

is one of the key elements expression of the artist, along with his relent-

less pursuit of freedom that transcends religious barriers, political, moral

or formal. Zoulikha Bouabdellah constantly explores the interstices

between "them and us" between the North and South, Europe and Africa,

Christianity and Islam and fundamentally, the gap between men and

women, the gap between what is visible and what is not said, the split

between pleasure and pain.

The artist often focuses on Arab and Islamic contributions in astrology,

mathematics, religion and aesthetics with a disturbing ability to forge new

meanings to expressions and recurring motifs which repeat, relate, over-

lap and reveal new and very modern meanings that intuit the interaction

of cultures. So she did with the series Two lovers, in which the word love,

so often recorded in the Arabic art, becomes two lovers that test all Kama-

The promoter of this new space for contemporary art in Madrid is Sabrina

Amrani. French of Algerian origin, she impulses a gallery project marked

by one word: dialogue, to see and to listen to others. Therefore, the

distinctive signs of the gallery Sabrina Amrani are proposals that invite to

think on the individual, the society or space. "Political or social thoughts:

the artist's own, always individually", Amrani said.

The gallery collaborates with artists José Luis Bongore, Elvire Bonduelle or

Zoulikha Bouabdellah, among others. Established and emerging artists of

many nationalities will come together in her space because, as stated by

the gallerist: "Nor art, much less dialogue, have borders." However, Amrani

acknowledges that the project will pay particular attention to the new

voices that are emerging in the Middle East and North Africa region.

About the gallerySabrina Amrani.

sutra postures.

Another of her most recognized work is Walk on the sky – Pisces, which

won the ArtDubai Abraaj Capital in 2009, the highest prestigious award in

the Arab world. In this ambitious work, a three-dimensional design, Zoulikha

embodied the constellation Pisces from conception of the astronomer

Abd al-Rahman al-Sufi (903-986), whose representations from Ptolemy

studies are the basis of present knowledge in this field. The piece made

use of the polygonal star, one of the symbols most depicted in Arabic art

and architecture throughout the ages, and closed the space with a floor

of mirror: the same that the Queen of Sheba crossed for her encounter

with the King Solomon, that wanted to satisfy his curiosity, not believing

the rumor that her ankles were hairy. This reference, present in the Bible

and the Koran, attached to the contribution to human knowledge of

al-Sufi, reflects the dialogue between cultures present in the work of the

artist.

With these works, the artist ensures is not searching subversion, although

she recognizes that "the transgression is an essential component of

modernity, that allows us to depart from the beaten path and change the

codes to look beyond". However, Bouabdellah’s work seems to look for

the subtlety in the message and a positive view of the underlying conflict.

Page 24: Sabrina Amrani Press Kit Zoulikha Bouabdellah Show

For more information00 34 627 539 884

[email protected]

Madera 23. 28004 Madrid, Spainwww.sabrinaamrani.com | twitter.com/sabrinaamrani | facebook.com/sabrinaamraniartgallery