----------empyre- soft-skinned space----------------------
Hello all
In response to one of Dale's earlier Qs: the artists I have worked with in the 
UAE have used the internet to make work about exile/belonging/citizenship (or 
lack thereof), compulsions across boundaries or taboos (physical, emotional, 
social, etc), hymen rejuvenation schemes that prey on Khaleeji women, to name a 
few. I think the first two artists, their work is relatable quite broadly. The 
third artist, her work was meant to spark a conversation amongst local women, 
which it did; it speaks to global feminist art practices secondarily. Most 
artists I worked with felt some kind of obligation to speak to a local 
community they identified with (whether city, nation, ethnicity, religion or 
region), but struggled to do so in ways that didn't feel a) trite or b) silo 
them as a [qualifying adjective]* artist - they reported often trying to speak 
broadly about the human condition from their particular vantage, and being 
frustrated as writers in the media defined their contributions as valuable 
solely because of their positionality.

*ie Arab, female Muslim, Emirati, etc. See also: Olu Oguibe, The Culture Game 
(2004)

-Beth
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