Anuar Khalifi’s solo exhibition explores dual identities through figurative work

Maan Jalal, The National News, May 5, 2023

The Spanish-Moroccan artist’s expressive work is both authentic and accessible

he dichotomy of identity is explored in bold, expressive figurative paintings in the solo exhibition of Spanish-Moroccan artist Anuar Khalifi at The Third Line in Alserkal Avenue.

 

Walking through the exhibition, called Mirror Ball, the viewer is struck by larger-than-life male figures set against colourful backgrounds, whose penetrating gazes are both inviting and proud.

 

“For a painter, every painting needs to be an iconic image, which is really difficult,” Khalifi tells The National.

 

“One image can have this power to open debates and be a symbol for a group of people. But it's not something you do on purpose. It’s a body of work — you do one, then the next one. You’re trying to resolve ideas and images.”

 

Khalifi’s paintings definitely have an aura about them. His figures, partly inspired by real people and partly created from his imagination, are seen in brightly coloured interiors — sitting on a chair, smoking a cigarette or staring pensively. Outdoors, they stand in the desert, under a full moon or ride a horse across the horizon. They are either in mid-action or still as if posing for a photograph.

 

All of them are dressed in a combination of contemporary fashion, white hoodies and trainers, or in traditional Moroccan kanduras, suits and Sufi-inspired garb.

 

Deep blues, turmeric yellows, dark emerald greens and bold reds, colours and tones often associated with the Arab region, are applied in balanced excess.

 

This amalgamation of elements in combination with Khalifi’s modern compositions, expressive brush strokes and his stylisation of elements, creates a surreal, familiar and accessible body of work.

 

Scroll through the gallery below for more pictures from Anuar Khalifi's Mirror Ball

 

“I’ve found that people can relate to this exhibition, even if their lives are different from each other,” Khalifi says.

 

“We Arabs share something because of the geographical places that we are from even when we are in diaspora. We grew up with certain things and traditions. Tradition is there always, it's something you cannot erase, it is in the landscape, it’s in our tongues and the way we interact.”

 

Influenced by classical painters and Moroccan culture, Khalifi attempts to explore the inner world, the motions of the mind and spirit in a visual manner.

 

Auto-biographical, imaginative, mystical and full of narrative elements, Mirror Ball is an homage to the continuously evolving journey of the self. The exhibition also includes a large, geometrical, mirrored sculpture in the centre of the space where the characters in the paintings along with the reflection of the viewer morph and intertwine.

 

Through this new body of work, Khalifi explored the idea of the self and dual identities, particularly that of living as an Arab in a foreign country.