ArtAsiaPacific

HIWA K

fter almost two decades of living in Germany, the Iraqi-Kurdish artist Hiwa K moved back to his birthplace in Kurdistan in early 2020. When we connected over Skype, he had just returned to the mountainous territory from Dubai, where his exhibition “Do You Remember What You are Burning?” had opened at the Jameel Arts Centre on December 16, 2020. “I don’t complain that it came too late, but it could have been earlier,” he said of his first solo show in West Asia. “It’s nice that people now start to understand what I want to share with them. There has been a lot of art from the region that points directly to issues with the index finger. The works that I

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from ArtAsiaPacific

ArtAsiaPacific3 min read
Unravel: The Power and Politics of Textiles in Art
Responding to various global sociopolitical tensions, “Unravel: The Power and Politics of Textiles in Art” at the Barbican Art Gallery, London, was as timely as it was resonant. Complemented by an increasing exposure to textile-based art, the exhibit
ArtAsiaPacific5 min read
Soft At The Top
Interest in South Asian art surged during Asia Week in New York. At the South Asian Modern and Contemporary Art auction on March 20, Christie’s New York brought in just under USD 20 million from 93 lots, a 79-percent increase from its USD 12 million
ArtAsiaPacific3 min read
Howie Tsui The Cradle Rocks Above an Abyss
For his first solo exhibition in the city of his birth, Canadian-Hong Kong artist Howie Tsui presented a new series of mixed-media works featuring surreal characters and absurdist scenes, in large part inspired by his nostalgia for mid-20th century C

Related