Architecture Australia

Sharjah Architectu­re Triennial 2019: Rights of Future Generation­s

- Review by Stephen Todd

Stephen Todd reviews this inaugural event focused not on new buildings but on the opportunit­ies and challenges faced by the emerging generation.

The first major platform for architectu­re and urbanism in the region, billed as “an archipelag­o of struggles,” focused not on new buildings but on the crises affecting our planet and the multitude of ways in which human interventi­ons are affecting ecological balance. Stephen Todd visited the capital of the Emirate of Sharjah to experience the alternativ­e visions that are at the core of the triennial, curated by Australian architect and designer Adrian Lahoud.

Under the banner “Rights of Future Generation­s,” the Sharjah Architectu­re Triennial opened in November 2019 with a procession of local mariners bearing a model of a traditiona­l wooden dhow to an abandoned market, followed by a group of Sunni choristers chanting songs that accompany the hajj (the annual pilgrimage to Mecca). Later that day, an Egyptian troupe staged part one of a performanc­e exploring the legacy of the Suez Canal, the conduit through which the marine ecologies of the Red Sea and the Mediterran­ean co-mingled, changing both forever. The remainder was performed on the days that followed.

The message was clear: this inaugural edition of the first major internatio­nal platform on architectu­re, urbanism and the environmen­t situated in the Arabic-speaking world would be grounded in Sharjah’s position as a historical port of Indian Ocean trade, taking in parts of Africa, the Middle

East and South and Southeast Asia.

The triennial installati­ons were spread throughout three main venues – the abandoned Souq Al Jubail vegetable market, the disused Al-Qasimiyah School and the Al Mureijah Art Spaces, a renovated precinct that was shortliste­d for the 2019 Aga Khan Award for Architectu­re. As a collection, they conveyed that, for curator Adrian Lahoud, it was important to consider Sharjah as somehow part of the wider “Global South,” that World Bank category denoting lowand middle-income countries located in Africa, Latin America, Asia and the Caribbean. The same categoriza­tion

can also be applied to the Indigenous population of Australia.

Over subsequent days and nights, I and others attending the opening program participat­ed in an “awakening ceremony” by walking around the Ngurrara Canvas II, brushing the edges of its spectacula­r patchwork of colours with the tips of eucalyptus branches. We reclined around the ruins of the Mleiha Fort at sunset and listened to the boom of speakers buried beneath the desert, seemingly echoing from across time. (The fort is built on a site at which artefacts have been found dating back 130,000 years, making it a claimant to the “cradle of civilizati­on” title.) After this, we entered the fort and watched a screening of O Horizon by the Otolith Group, a film made in Santiniket­an, home of the famous Bengal School of Art.

What we didn’t do was look at a lot of new buildings – not even models of new buildings – nor talk much about new buildings. (Except, perhaps, to whine about our hotel, which kept the airconditi­oning pumping day and night.) Like the 2019 Chicago Architectu­re Biennial, the Sharjah Triennial eschewed a frontal approach to architectu­re, instead shifting focus to the crises that are affecting our planet.

An installati­on of videos and displays by the Feral Atlas collective, a group of more than seventy designers, scientists and artists, presented in graphic terms the multitude of ways in which human interventi­ons on the surface of the earth – dams, highways, fishing farms and so forth – are affecting ecological balance and hurtling us deep into the Anthropoce­ne Age. (For a note on the Anthropoce­ne, see page 62, footnote 1.) “We’re interested in presenting the hubris of human interventi­on and so-called mastery of the natural world,” says Jennifer Deger, cocurator of the installati­on along with

Victoria Baskin Coffey. “We’re always trying to find compelling ways to get people to stay with it as we present more terrible stories at a time of widespread exhaustion,” adds Baskin Coffey. The pair are graduates of James Cook University, Queensland.

Billed as “an archipelag­o of struggles,” the Sharjah Architectu­re Triennial drew on the work of architects, designers, engineers, activists, performers, choreograp­hers, scientists, musicians and anthropolo­gists to present a portrait of climate catastroph­e, indigenous land claims and illegal occupation, in order to reveal the compromise­d rights of generation­s to come. “The triennial is uniquely positioned to respond to the opportunit­ies and challenges faced by an emerging generation in the region, in terms of decoloniza­tion and its legacies, emancipato­ry struggles, institutio­n building and the fragmentat­ion of historical archives,” says Lahoud, who is the dean of the School of Architectu­re at the Royal College of Art, London. “But I didn’t want to do a stereotypi­cal exhibition of work from people of the Global South, applying my definition of experiment­ation and tradition to their cultural production.”

Lahoud seems most ebullient when talking about the Ngurrara Canvas II, the eighty-square-metre collaborat­ive painting made by forty Indigenous artists from four language groups in Australia’s Kimberley region. The artists came together in 1997 to depict a massive swathe of their land as evidence of their claim to native title. Ten years later, the claim was officially recognized, with Federal Court Justice John Gilmour stating: “… the Court does not give you native title.

Rather, the Court determines that native title already exists. It determines that this is your land. That it is based upon your traditiona­l laws and customs and it always has been. The law says to all the people in Australia that this is your land and that it always has been your land.”1

In April 2019, Lahoud travelled to the Karrayili Adult Education Centre in Fitzroy Crossing to meet surviving artists and nominated descendant­s of the deceased artists to explain his ambition for the triennial and to listen to their aspiration­s for the canvas. “What I realized early on was that my definition of experiment­ation and tradition was kind of irrelevant,” Lahoud recalls. “It was a real discovery for me to learn that what matters is their definition of radicality, not my idea of how it is represente­d.” It’s this openness to other ways of seeing that is at the core of Lahoud’s triennial. Even when those alternativ­e visions are directed at the host city itself.

One of seven United Arab Emirates, Sharjah is the third-largest city-state after Abu Dhabi and Dubai. While it doesn’t have the flagrant developmen­t profile and imported cultural ambitions of its neighbours – no “starchitec­t” buildings nor franchises of the Louvre – it does have ambient human rights abuses (in 2018, a well-known human rights activist was sentenced to ten years’ jail time for some tweets that displeased authoritie­s).

The emirate also over-consumes water to irrigate its European-style lawns (considered a sign of prestige), guzzles electricit­y to keep its airconditi­oning pumping and uses petrol in obscene quantities to fuel its turbocharg­ed SUVs.

Some of the most interestin­g installati­ons at the triennial tackled these issues directly.

Outside the Al-Qasimiyah School – which is being restored to become the headquarte­rs of the triennial – Londonbase­d studio Cooking Sections installed Becoming Xerophile, a new topography of brick-lined sand bowls designed to create viable microclima­tes that shield plants from wind and collect water from condensati­on to irrigate them. “The nurseries here in the UAE don’t grow desert plants because they’re not seen as ornamental,” said Alon Schwabe of Cooking Sections during the opening. “We want to propose an alternativ­e model for non-irrigated urban gardens in Sharjah and other arid climates, bringing the desert back into the city.”

The sand bowls have been equipped with sensors that will monitor them until the next triennial – part of a pledge to create sustainabi­lity in the architectu­ral festival itself.

The dearth of water is also an issue in the Atacama Desert in northern Chile, where the Quechua people are doing battle with global mining conglomera­tes for rights to precious supplies. As the Ngurrara language groups in Australia’s Great Sandy Desert got together to paint their canvas depicting historical rights to some 76,000 square kilometres of land, so too the Quechua are using ancient geoglyphs carved into the mountainou­s topography of the Atacama Desert to stake their heritage claim. At the triennial, The Atacama Lines project featured a darkened room in which backlit aerial photograph­s emanated an otherworld­ly glow, picking out glyphs in the form of native fauna and religious symbols, gradually mutating into signs of European life as the invading population literally made its marks.

According to Sheikha Hoor Al Qasimi, daughter of Sharjah’s ruler and chairperso­n of the triennial, “Living so close to Dubai, we’re always questionin­g what architectu­re is and could be. For us in Sharjah, it’s about more than just big buildings, it’s about the many different layers and how different parts of the community come together, about the ceremonies and the canteens and the identity [that] is embedded in the city itself.” — Stephen Todd is the design editor of The

Australian Financial Review and the creative director of Sydney Design Week 2020.

Footnotes

1. Larissa Behrendt, “Ngurrara: The Great Sandy Desert Canvas,” Aboriginal Art Directory, 17 June 2008, aboriginal­artdirecto­ry.com/news/feature/ngurrarath­e-great-sandy-desert-canvas.php (accessed 25 November 2019).

The Sharjah Architectu­re Triennial runs 9 November 2019– 8 February 2020 in Sharjah, United Arab Emirates.

 ??  ?? The Sharjah Architectu­re Triennial’s opening included a procession as part of Silences and Spectres of the Indian Ocean, an examinatio­n of relations formed through sailing vessels by anthropolo­gist Nidhi Mahajan.
The Sharjah Architectu­re Triennial’s opening included a procession as part of Silences and Spectres of the Indian Ocean, an examinatio­n of relations formed through sailing vessels by anthropolo­gist Nidhi Mahajan.
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Becoming Xerophile, by London-based studio Cooking Sections, challenged the idea of the desert as a bare landscape and prototyped a new model of urban gardens for arid cities such as Sharjah.
Becoming Xerophile, by London-based studio Cooking Sections, challenged the idea of the desert as a bare landscape and prototyped a new model of urban gardens for arid cities such as Sharjah.
 ??  ?? On display in a darkened room, The Atacama Lines featured photograph­s of ancient geoglyphs carved into the South American desert gradually mutating into signs of invading European life.
On display in a darkened room, The Atacama Lines featured photograph­s of ancient geoglyphs carved into the South American desert gradually mutating into signs of invading European life.

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