24 Dec 2011

A haven for the arts

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Let’s assume for a second that you’re homing in on Barsha on the back of a giant bird. From afar, you see a cross-section of living and shopping spaces, with apartments and villas rubbing corners with little shops, restaurants, and hypermarkets. The Mall of the Emirates, with its protruding ski slope, slides into view as retail lynchpin.

Hover a bit closer and you realize Barsha is a community humming and bustling in its own right. People mill around, cars honk and there are the inevitable traffic jams. From your perch in the sky, you linger over busy street corners. Just a few turns away, villas sit slouching in the very epitome of languor.

As a strictly amateur thespian, comedian, and general noisemaker, I find the arts scene in Barsha figuring ever more prominently within my schedule. And that’s largely due to two enterprises: DUCTAC and the Jam Jar.

Nestled in the Mall of the Emirates, the DUCTAC theatre is home to an artsy generality of people of all ages - some as tiny as kneecap-biting five or six. It offers lessons in music, comedy, tap dance, improv, writing and Arabic, and there is theatre space for all manner of performances. From little girls dressed in pink tutus to people carrying a menacing array of props and scripts, DUCTAC is home for everyone with even a fibre of interest in the arts. Within DUCTAC operate the indomitable duo of Ali Al Sayed and Mina Liccione, the founders of Dubomedy. Mina is an ex-Broadway tap queen and comedienne, and Ali a world-class purveyor of comedy in his own right. I’m currently dabbling in stand-up comedy classes with them, and thoroughly enjoying the bonhomie and camaraderie.

Then, if you were to gain some altitude, and look across to the other side of the Umm Suqeim road dividing Barsha from Al Quoz, you would see the Jam Jar hidden between rows of identical warehouses. Technically, it’s on the wrong side of the street to be considered Barsha. But its influence and proximity means it deserves honorary mention.

One of the true pioneers of Dubai’s homegrown arts scene, it caters to a wide variety of events- musical performances, theatre, and arts exhibitions. It’s a communal space that’s easily accessible, and the all-girl team is genuinely enthusiastic about arts and culture. The Jam Jar, in some manner or other, has been involved with many of the seminal arts and culture events in Dubai and even Abu Dhabi. I have memories of several happy evenings and afternoons there.

Between the Jam Jar and DUCTAC, Barsha’s denizens can rest assured there will always be artsy endeavors to soothe the soul.

19 Jul 2011

The UAE Zayed National Museum: A question of epistemological identity

This article was written for Shawati, an arts and culture coffee table book that's published every three months by ADACH. Be warned, it's a bit of a read.  

[Image from Google]

What is a national museum? An artifice to bygone valour and glory? A genuine starting point of exploration into the world and its many cultures? A badge of national pride with aesthetics reminding us of disposable income? Or perhaps, it's an ever-iterating quest for an indefinable ideal wherein an entire nation's ambitions, valour and past can be condensed into a few thousand metres of space.

Read the rest of this post »

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Hisham Wyne's Posterous

is a columnist, copywriter and radio commentator. His endless gabbing scores him frequent MC and compering gigs.

This is a blog of all his published work - in newspapers, magazines, other blogs and aggregators. For up to the minute random ramblings, hit up his Wordpress blog

He writes for the Huffington Post, Khaleej Times, Gulf News, Global Comment and the Weekend Review, and Bespoke International, plus some he can't recall. He is a regular at Dubai Eye 103.8 radio studios in some guise or other.

He is also currently making feeble attempts to write his first novel. Or more precisely, a collection of short stories.



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