Alia Farid
Monira Al Qadiri’s recent projects investigate the implication of the oil industry for the countries of the Arabian Gulf region, and the precarity of their imminent future. The artist enquires what is left to commemorate when this transient petroleum interval is over. There are several of her works combined for the installation within the Future Generation Art Prize such as large scale sculpture Empire Dye, miniature objects Wonder 1, 2, 3 and the latest video Diver. In the Wonder series, and video Diver, Al Qadiri refers to the historical and cultural legacy of pearl diving and trade practices which were swept away with the emergence of the oil economy. The artist creates the shapes of oil drill bits carved from natural pearls in order to concoct an aesthetic relationship between oil and pearls, where originally none exists. In the video Diver this context is autobiographical. Al Qadiri’s grandfather was a singer on a pearling ship. The music used for with synchronised swimmers’ performance is one of the traditional pearl diving songs. Empire Dye is shaped like a giant seashell and covered in purple. The purple dye has shifting connotations. It is the colour of bad luck in the oil industry, and at the same time an ancient precious pigment extracted from thousands of Murex seashells, symbolic of the power of emperors and kings. The form of the shell, with its tentacles expanding in every direction, signifies both the political and economic ambitions of the fossil fuel industry.