Inside Sara Naim’s ‘From the Perspective of Language’ show in Dubai

'A Chickpea Hummus.' (Supplied)
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Updated 27 February 2026
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Inside Sara Naim’s ‘From the Perspective of Language’ show in Dubai

DUBAI: Here are three highlights from Sara Naim’s ‘From the Perspective of Language,’ running March 4 to April 7 at The Third Line in Dubai. 

‘Skin 5’

This is the Syrian artist’s fourth solo exhibition at The Third Line, and includes a new video performance — “Mother Practices Her Tongue” — which “abstracts the Arabic language into gestures and sounds that no longer produce coherent meaning.” Together with the show’s large-scale works such as this one, it “extends Naim’s ongoing investigation into how meaning is constructed through inherited systems such as language, symbols and ideology,” the press release states.

‘A Chickpea, Hummus’

This is one of the more figurative paintings on display in “From the Perspective of Language,” and an example of how Naim uses “arrangements of symbolically charged imagery” to “examine boundaries and the limits of representation,” the catalogue explains. The show as a whole “asks how meaning is constructed and imposed, and where intuition and effect persist beyond formal systems of representation.”

‘Skin 8’

The series of paintings titled “Skin” are inspired by Naim’s “interest in body tattoos as markers of belief systems” and “treat skin as both subject and medium, with the canvas functioning as a porous surface onto which images are layered,” the catalogue states. “By leaving space for interpretation, the paintings invite viewers to actively construct meaning — a process reflecting Kant’s idea that understanding arises not from objects themselves, but through engagement (with them).”


Lebanese filmmaker turns archival footage into a love letter to Beirut

Updated 28 February 2026
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Lebanese filmmaker turns archival footage into a love letter to Beirut

LONDON: Lebanese filmmaker Lana Daher’s debut feature “Do You Love Me” is a love letter of sorts to Beirut, composed entirely of archival material spanning seven decades across film, television, home videos and photography.

The film premiered at the 82nd Venice International Film Festival in September and has since traveled to several regional and international festivals.

Pink Smoke (2020) by Ben Hubbard. (Supplied)

With minimal dialogue, the film relies heavily on image and sound to reconstruct Lebanon’s fragmented history.

“By resisting voiceover and autobiography, I feel like I had to trust the image and the shared emotional landscape of these archives to carry the meaning,” Daher said.

A Suspended Life (Ghazal el-Banat) (1985) by Jocelyne Saab. (Supplied)

She explained that in a city like Beirut “where trauma is rarely private,” the socio-political context becomes the atmosphere of the film, with personal memory expanding into a collective experience — “a shared terrain of emotional history.”

Daher said: “By using the accumulated visual representations of Beirut, I was, in a way, rewriting my own representation of home through images that already existed."

Whispers (1980) by Maroun Bagdadi. (Supplied)

Daher, with editor Qutaiba Barhamji, steered clear of long sequences, preferring individual shots that allowed them to “reassemble meaning” while maintaining the integrity of their own work and respecting the original material, she explained.

The film does not feature a voice-over, an intentional decision that influenced the use of sound, music, and silence.

The Boombox (1995) by Fouad Elkoury. (Supplied)

“By resisting the urge to fill every space with dialogue or score, we created room for discomfort,” Daher said, adding that silence allows the audience to sit with the image and enter its emotional space rather than being guided too explicitly.

 The film was a labor of love, challenging Daher personally and professionally.

“When you draw from personal memory, you’re not just directing scenes, you’re revisiting parts of yourself and your childhood,” she said. “There’s vulnerability in that.”