Thursday, February 5, 2026

Let's applaud !!! Qatar Museums Unveils Programme For Rubaiya Qatar, A New Contemporary Art Quadrennial:Inaugural Edition to Run from November 2026 to Spring 2027

I am personally very excited to see this Environmentally supportive innovative art exhibitions supported by the Qatar Museums. 

 

Qatar Museums Unveils Programme For Rubaiya Qatar,
A New Contemporary Art Quadrennial

Inaugural Edition to Run from November 2026 to Spring 2027

Led by headline exhibition Unruly Waters, which will feature more than 50 artists and over 20 new commissions, exploring water as a motif through which to understand the ways in which geography, ecology, history and human activity have shaped Qatar’s place within global networks spanning Asia.

 
 


Photo credits: Qatar Museums

 

Doha, Qatar, 04 February 2026 – Qatar Museums (QM) today announced the programme for Rubaiya Qatar, a new nationwide multidisciplinary contemporary art quadrennial developed under the auspices of ALRIWAQ Art + Architecture, the contemporary art and architecture institution of Qatar Museums dedicated to research, exhibitions, and public art. Conceived to elevate Qatar’s international presence and empower new generations of artists and thinkers, Rubaiya Qatar will present a dynamic programme of exhibitions, commissions, public art projects, residencies, publications, and more, organised every four years under a single theme.

As part of this inaugural programme, Qatar Museums also announced further details of Unruly Waters, the flagship and largest exhibition of Rubaiya Qatar. Referencing the book of the same title by environmental historian Sunil Amrith, Unruly Waters features works by more than 50 contemporary artists, many of whom have been commissioned to create new work for the project. The exhibition explores how both humans and nature have shaped today’s realities across a region spanning from the Gulf to East Asia, while also examining Qatar’s place within that region.

Sheikha Reem Al Thani, Qatar Museums Deputy CEO of ALRIWAQ Art + Architecture, Public Art, and Rubaiya Qatar, said, “Rubaiya Qatar builds on the growth of Qatar Museums over the past two decades, aiming to reflect the country’s aspirations by positioning Doha as a hub for global art practice. This inaugural edition of Rubaiya Qatar will foster new creative networks, support emerging artists who are pushing the boundaries of innovation, and showcase Doha as a platform for the exchange of cutting-edge ideas.”

Sheikha Alanood Al Thani, Director, Rubaiya Qatar, said, “Unruly Waters locates Qatar as a meeting point for different cultures and traditions, underscoring the nation’s past and present role as a geopolitical hub. Alongside works by major contemporary artists, the exhibition will present artefacts from Qatar Museums’ extensive collections to propose new artistic and historical connections, shining a light on how the wider Gulf region has been shaped by nature and global weather systems as much as by commerce, trade, and culture.”

Unruly Waters
Rubaiya Qatar will include multiple exhibitions, public artworks and activations across Qatar. Its headline exhibition, Unruly Waters, will be on view at ALRIWAQ Art + Architecture and part of Rubaiya Qatar’s multi-site activations across Qatar. Curated by Tom Eccles (Executive Director, Center for Curatorial Studies and the Hessel Museum of Art, Bard College), Ruba Katrib (Chief Curator and Director of Curatorial Affairs, MoMA PS1), Mark Rappolt (Editor-in-Chief of ArtReview and ArtReview Asia), and Shabbir Hussain Mustafa (Chief Curator, Singapore Art Museum). 

Tom Eccles said, “The quadrennial exhibition introduces a new type of transnational, transdisciplinary program to Doha, rooted in issues that affect both Qatar and the wider region. The artists exhibiting broadly represent the diverse nationalities that live in Qatar, while their work reflects the shared geographical, environmental and social realities of today. The program builds upon the ambitious expansion of the arts in Doha over the past decade and represents another milestone in the evolution of Qatar’s commitment to dialogue within the international arts community.”

The more than 50 artists invited to participate in Unruly Waters come from a region informed by both the ancient Maritime Silk Road and Qatar’s present demographics—a region that is locally rooted but often diasporic, and a site of artistic innovation and research. Their works are engaged with the urgencies of ecologic transformation and geopolitical reality, and reflect the migratory patterns that have shaped the Gulf for more than a thousand years, continuing to today. Artists participating include Lawrence Abu Hamdan, Sophia Al Maria, Mohamed Bourouissa, Ade Darmawan, Alia Farid, Naiza Khan, Dala Nasser, Lydia Ourahmane, Marina Tabassum, and Rirkrit Tiravanija.

Exhibition themes will focus on the circulation and transport of people, goods, and ideas; embedded histories and memories of infrastructure; and speculative futurism. The works on show span a range of media, from painting and sculpture, to moving image, storytelling, sound, and performance. In all of this, art functions as a cross-border medium, drawing up new solidarities and new connections.

Unruly Waters will also present artefacts held by Qatar Museums, including objects from the Cirebon shipwreck, a late-9th- to 10th-century merchant vessel salvaged in 2003 in Indonesia’s Java Sea. The wreck’s cargo provides significant evidence of a Maritime Silk Road, early forms of globalisation, and trade across the Indian Ocean, suggesting a shared cultural history predating European colonialism, governed not by national borders, but by winds, tides, and rains. The wreck’s artefacts will allow the exhibition to speculate on entanglements that resist conventional geographic frameworks and the separate histories of West, South, and East Asia. By presenting these objects alongside contemporary artworks, Unruly Waters aims to shine a light on a vast, interconnected Asia.

Unruly Waters builds on years of research, including the 2022 exhibition One Tiger or Another, presented at Mathaf: Arab Museum of Modern Art and curated by Eccles and Rappolt, and “Water Ways: Epistemologies and Aesthetics,” a three-day academic conference organised in February 2024 by Qatar Museums, Rubaiya Qatar, and Doha Institute for Graduate Studies.

Our Common Currents
In addition, Rubaiya Qatar will present Our Common Currents, curated by Lina Patmali, Acting Head of Curatorial Affairs, Rubaiya Qatar, at QM Katara Gallery. The exhibition is anchored in Qatar, where water is a defining element of both the cultural and natural landscapes through pearling and maritime trade heritage, nomadic traditions, and their environmental counterparts: the sea, the coast, and the deserts. Expanding to other contexts, the exhibition traces common experiences between humans and bodies of water while reexamining humans’ relationship with water to imagine sustainable, viable futures. 

Seething Sea
At Mathaf: Arab Museum of Modern Art, the exhibition Seething Sea brings together modern and contemporary works by Gulf artists to reflect on the region’s historic relationship with the sea as a source of life, danger, and storytelling. Drawing on maritime myths, rituals, and cultural memory, the exhibition considers how inherited knowledge and imaginaries confront ecological degradation and rapid transformations. The exhibition is curated by Wadha Al Aqeedi, a curator and art historian.

Further exhibitions, public art projects, and public programmes presented as part of Rubaiya Qatar include projects with Wael Shawky, Rirkrit Tiravanija, Qatar National Library, the Biennale of Sydney, and Qatar’s pavilion at the 2026 Venice Biennale. A series of public art unveilings throughout the duration of Rubaiya Qatar will include works by Jitish Kallat and Minerva Cuevas.

Rubaiya Qatar is presented as part of Evolution Nation, a campaign honouring Qatar’s cultural journey over the past 50 years, since the founding of the National Museum of Qatar, and 20 years since the founding of Qatar Museums. Curated by Qatar Creates, the national movement positioning Qatar as a global hub for art, culture, and creativity, Evolution Nation highlights both the nation’s cultural milestones and its aspirations. Rubaiya Qatar will also act as the first major program ushering in the new era of Qatar Museums.

 

-ENDS-

About Qatar Museums
Now marking its 20th anniversary, Qatar Museums (QM), the nation's preeminent institution for art and culture, provides authentic and inspiring cultural experiences through a growing network of museums, heritage sites, festivals, public art installations, and programmes. QM preserves, restores, and expands the nation's cultural offerings and historical sites, sharing art and culture from Qatar, Southwest Asia and North Africa (SWANA) region with the world and enriching the lives of citizens, residents, and visitors.

Under the patronage of His Highness the Amir, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, and led by its Chairperson, Her Excellency Sheikha Al Mayassa bint Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani, QM has made Qatar a vibrant centre for the arts, culture, and education in West Asia and beyond. QM is integral to the goal of developing an innovative, diverse, and progressive nation, bringing people together to ignite new thinking, spark critical cultural conversations, educate and encourage environmental stewardship and sustainable practices, and amplify the voices of Qatar's people. Since its founding in 2005, QM has overseen the Museum of Islamic Art and MIA Park, Mathaf: Arab Museum of Modern Art, the National Museum of Qatar, ALRIWAQ, QM Gallery Katara and the 3-2-1 Qatar Olympic and Sports Museum. Future museums include Dadu, Children's Museum of Qatar, Qatar Auto Museum, Art Mill Museum and the Lusail Museum.

Through its newly created Creative Hub, QM also initiates and supports projects—such as the Fire Station, the Tasweer Qatar Photo Festival and the creative hub for innovation, fashion and design M7, Liwan Design Studios and Labs, and Design Doha Biennale—that nurture artistic talent and create opportunities to build a strong and sustainable cultural infrastructure.

Animating everything that Qatar Museums does is an authentic connection to Qatar and its heritage, a steadfast commitment to inclusivity and accessibility, and a belief in creating value through invention.

About Rubaiya Qatar
A major new project under Qatar Museums, Rubaiya Qatar is an international contemporary art quadrennial set to open in November 2026 as a multisite event across Qatar. Rubaiya Qatar is being developed under the auspices of ALRIWAQ Art + Architecture and Qatar Museums and serves as a platform for diverse discourse and public engagement. With a dynamic programme of exhibitions, public art projects, publications, artist residencies, and community development initiatives, Rubaiya Qatar will highlight Qatar as a global centre for art, culture and creativity. Sheikha Alanood Al Thani is the director of Rubaiya Qatar.

About ALRIWAQ Art + Architecture
ALRIWAQ Art + Architecture—home to Rubaiya Qatar—is Qatar Museums’ institution dedicated to research, programming, and exhibitions in the fields of contemporary art, architecture, and public art. Led by Sheikha Reem Al Thani, Deputy CEO of ALRIWAQ Art + Architecture, Public Art, and Rubaiya Qatar, the institution originally opened in 2010 in a 5,000 square-metre space and is currently being renovated by Rem Koolhaas and the Office for Metropolitan Architecture (OMA). ALRIWAQ has presented a range of major exhibitions, including Dan Flavin/Donald Judd: Doha (2023); Lusail Museum: Tales of a Connected World (2022–2023); Jeff Koons: Lost in America (2021–2022); Driven by German Design (2017); What About the Art: Contemporary Art from China (2016); I am the cry; who will give voice to me? Dia al-Azzawi: A Retrospective (from 1963 until tomorrow) (2016); Here There, Qatar Brazil (2014); Intolerance: Luc Tuymans (2015); Relics: Damien Hirst (2013); and The Art of Travel: Bartholomäus Schachman (15591614) (2012). Currently on view is I.M. Pei: Life is Architecture.


In Mexico City attend the Zsonamaco Opening Feb4-8th. and see Emmanuelle G. Contemporary

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 Zsonamaco Opening Today


Greetings from Mexico City! 

Zsonamaco opens today, and we are honored to be exhibiting at Latin America’s largest contemporary art fair alongside hundreds of esteemed international galleries. Held in Mexico City, a global hub for cutting-edge contemporary art and design, the fair brings together an exceptional community of galleries, artists, collectors, and institutions.

We will be presenting in the Ejes section, which means Axis. Our presentation of Parvaze and Mayer and Laurence Perratzi, centers on questions of interconnection across culture, geography, and medium. Our aim is to highlight how art can foster open dialogue and create connection.  

If you’re looking to escape the cold, we invite you to join us at Centro Citibanamex, where you can find us at Booth EJ6 from February 4-8th. The full fair hours are below. 

Warmly, 

Emmanuelle G. Contemporary


Parvaze and MayerCelulas2025, Hand Stitched Wool, 55.5 x 35.5 in 

Laurence PerratziHead in the Clouds, Bronze and Foam, 35.5 x 23.5 x 12in 

ZONAMACO Arte Contemporáneo
Centro Citibanamex, Mexico City
February 4–8, 2026 | Booth EJ6

Hours:

Wednesday, February 4
10:00 AM–12:00 PM | Exclusive Collector & Museum Preview
12:00 PM–5:00 PM | VIP Guests
5:00 PM–8:00 PM | General Public

Thursday, February 5
12:00 PM–1:00 PM | VIP Guests
1:00 PM–8:00 PM | General Public

Friday, February 6
12:00 PM–1:00 PM | VIP Guests
1:00 PM–8:00 PM | General Public

Saturday, February 7
12:00 PM–8:00 PM | General Public

Sunday, February 8
11:00 AM–6:00 PM | General Public

Venue:
Centro Citibanamex
Avenida del Conscripto 311
Lomas de Sotelo, Miguel Hidalgo
Mexico City, CDMX 11200

Emmanuelle G. Contemporary


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Wednesday, February 4, 2026

Zona Maco Louis Stern Fine Arts Booth AM104 | Centro Banamex Mexico City February 4 – 8, 2026

Zona Maco 

Louis Stern Fine Arts 

Booth AM104 | Centro Banamex

 

Mexico City
February 4 – 8, 2026

Louis Stern Fine Arts is delighted to announce the gallery’s return to Zona Maco with a presentation highlighting its 20th century program. On view are historically significant master works, created between 1932 – 2001, by a selection of estate artists represented by the gallery.

Paintings, carved reliefs, and works on paper by Karl Benjamin (1925-2012)Ynez Johnston (1920-2019)Helen Lundeberg (1908-1999)Doug Ohlson (1936-2010)Anita Payró (1897-1980)Alfredo Ramos Martínez (1871-1946), and Frederick Wight (1902-1986) showcase the philosophical and aesthetic inquiries that served as the foundations of these artists’ practices. The presentation calls particular attention to their use of consonance and form, appealing to both the real and the abstract in pursuit of creating quiet, intimate spaces in the mind. Anita Payró’s geometric forms capture light from the sky in transparent layers, playing against the chiaroscuro of Helen Lundeberg’s serene allusions to nature and interior spaces. Karl Benjamin’s condensed landscape invites conversation of sub-surface depth, as Frederick Wight conjures a terrestrial eruption triggered by powerful, unseen forces. Doug Ohlson’s paintings consider the topsy-turvy folding of nature through timeless geometric forms. Ynez Johnston’s peculiar inscriptions narrate a recursive dreamworld of faraway ideals. Selected late works by Alfredo Ramos Martínez capture moments of quiet reflection and camaraderie in the midst of hardship, longing, and restless anticipation.
See Booth AM104
Louis Stern Fine Arts
9002 Melrose Avenue
West Hollywood, CA  90069

Contact
310-276-0147
info@louissternfinearts.com
 www.louissternfinearts.com

Follow us on Instagram (@louissternfinearts) for updates and additional material.
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Fields of Vision: Dallas Collects at Green Family Art Foundation February 7 - August 9, 2026

This February, discover highlights from Dallas’s collecting community, celebrate a new cohort of emerging artists, and explore the work of a contemporary Spanish artist.

Tina Vahed, In-Between, 2025. video art. overall installation width: approx. 12–13 ft. Image courtesy of the artist.

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