The year has been strong for the local art scene, with a steady run of thoughtful and well-curated exhibitions.
As 2025 draws to a close and prompts reflection, here are 10 of the most memorable exhibitions, from those that underscored the urgency of art in the face of cultural erasure to those that traced new connections in the regionβs art history.
Vestiges at Ayyam Gallery
The stone sculptures bear the weight of a conflict-ridden world. Victor Besa / The National
Iraqi-Dutch artist Athar Jaber marked his first solo exhibition in Dubai earlier this year, with a series of stone sculptures that bear the weight of the modern world.
The busts show human faces with features that have been pummeled in or twisted out of place. Limbs, torsos and heads emerge with Hellenistic grace and detail from marble blocks that have otherwise been left coarse and unfinished. The body parts in Jaberβs sculptures are severed, almost writhing.
The sculptures in Vestiges were not new, with some having been produced in 2014. However, their themes and concerns within the works remain topical.
Jaber created the works after witnessing from afar the turmoil that has affected Iraq and the wider Middle East. It left an indelible mark on his perception of the world β a mark he sought to transpose in stone.
βPeople are sometimes disturbed or shocked by my work,β he told The National in March. βBut then look at what we have been fed through the media. Seeing what we've seen, I can't make beautiful things that just embellish and adorn.β
The exhibition concluded in April
Layered Medium at Manarat Al Saadiyat
The exhibition brought together works by more than two dozen South Korean artists. Ryan Lim for The National
Layered Medium: We are in Open Circuits examined the beginnings of the contemporary art movement in South Korea in the mid-20th century, charting its development until the present day.
It was the first major showcase of Korean contemporary art in the Gulf and comes as the inaugural project of a three-year collaboration between Abu Dhabi Music and Arts Foundation (Admaf) and Seoul Museum of Art (Sema).
The exhibition brought together works by more than two dozen South Korean artists, from pioneers including Nam June Paik and Park Hyunki to renowned contemporary figures such as Lee Bul, Haegue Yang and Moka Lee. Layered Medium was not intended as a comprehensive survey of contemporary South Korean art, but it still presented a healthy breadth of works that showed the diversity of practices that shaped the countryβs avant-garde scene.
The exhibition concluded in June
Nadia Saikali and Her Contemporaries at Maraya Art Centre
The exhibition used Saikaliβs work to explore Beirut as a hub for other female Arab artists. Photo: Maraya Art Centre
Nadia Saikali and Her Contemporaries was organised in collaboration with Maraya Art Centre and Barjeel Art Foundation. The show shone a long-overdue light on Saikali, a Lebanese artist born in 1936. It brought together artworks from the 1960s that demonstrated the artistβs striking range.
The exhibition also used Saikaliβs work as a point of departure to explore how, in the latter half of the 20th century, Beirut was a hub for several female Arab artists, many of whom had a keen sense for abstraction. These include renowned Lebanese figures such as Saloua Raouda Choucair, Huguette Caland, Etel Adnan and Helen Khal, as well as Kuwaiti artist Munira Al-Kazi, Iraqi abstract artist Madiha Umar, Jordanian sculptor Mona Saudi, Syrian painter Asma Fayoumi, and Palestinian mixed-media artist Maliheh Afnan.
As such, the exhibition deftly captured the impact of modern women artists from the region, while also showing how Beirut as a city was instrumental in producing seminal works of Arab abstraction.
The exhibition concluded in July
The Only Way Out is Through: The Twentieth Line at The Third Line
The Only Way Out Is Through: The Twentieth Line is running until December 28. Antonie Robertson/The National
The Only Way Out is Through marks the 20th anniversary of The Third Line, one of Dubaiβs first art institutions.
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