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Careem and The Giving Movement launch Seeds for Lebanon t-shirt

A collaborative drop that turns everyday wear into direct humanitarian support.

Careem and The Giving Movement launch Seeds for Lebanon t-shirt

Image for illustration · Art in the Middle archive

Across the Gulf, the conversation around contemporary art has shifted from spectacle to substance. What was once measured in square metres of fair space is now weighed in ideas — and the institutions, galleries and independent voices shaping that shift are increasingly homegrown.

A collaborative drop that turns everyday wear into direct humanitarian support.

The most interesting work happening here right now is the work that refuses to explain itself to an outside audience.

A region finding its own language

For years the prevailing narrative framed Gulf art through an external lens — as emerging, as catching up, as derivative of older capitals. That framing is finally falling away. Artists are drawing on local material culture, oral history and the textures of the everyday, and audiences are meeting them on their own terms.

Galleries and foundations have played their part, but so have the quieter ecosystems: studio collectives in repurposed warehouses, late-night critique sessions, and the kind of long-table dinners where a sketchbook is as welcome as a plate.

What to watch next

The months ahead bring a dense calendar of openings, fairs and residencies stretching from Dubai to Diriyah. For collectors and the merely curious alike, the advice is the same: show up early, ask questions, and let the work surprise you. The scene rewards attention.

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Written by
Sara Khoury · Editor-at-Large

Sara leads our coverage of the institutions and exhibitions defining the Emirates' cultural calendar — from blockbuster museum openings to the quiet shows worth crossing the city for. She has reported from every major Gulf fair since 2021.