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  • Musaffah industrial zone to get 'Art Hub'

    The National

    Musaffah industrial zone to get 'Art Hub'

    Matt Kwong

    Last Updated: August 23. 2009 2:38PM UAE / August 23. 2009 10:38AM GMT

    The Basement Gallery is one of several in Dubai's Al Quoz industrial
    area. Lauren Lancaster / The National

    ABU DHABI // A creative arts centre in the Musaffah industrial zone is
    expected to ease the capital's shortage of cheap studio space for
    emerging artists.
    Groundwork has already begun on the 650-square-metre warehouse dubbed
    the Art Hub, which is due to open next year and is the brainchild of
    Tini Meyer.
    An artist of German and Spanish descent who paints and experiments
    with conceptual art, Ms Meyer, 26, said the site would accommodate
    dozens of musicians, calligraphers, sculptors, jewellers, painters,
    designers and more.

    It would mirror a similar initiative in the Al Quoz industrial area of
    Dubai, in which galleries have sprung up next to factories and in
    converted warehouses.
    `I want to turn Art Hub into somewhere that artists will be proud to
    work,' Ms Myer said. `We are trying to create a platform for artists.'
    A major challenge in the city, she noted, was for artists to find
    quality studio space at low rents.

    `A studio is a workshop, but it is also a strong selling point,' she
    said. Musaffah is only a 10-minute drive from the bridges off the
    island, and `people who want to buy art will make the effort if they
    know they are going to find a dozen or so artists all producing their
    works on site'.
    The Art Hub would include private and `live-work' studios each
    measuring about 80sq m and with kitchenette and bathroom.

    A community studio centre would be open downstairs, and would have a
    lounge area and cafe.
    Art teachers might also be able to rent out space for classes.
    `We might have independent movie nights, or jamming sessions where
    people can practise and hang out, so that would be free,' Ms Meyer
    added.
    A rent structure should be finalised after Ramadan, but one idea is to
    charge casual or `hobby artists' by the day.

    `If somebody wants to come and paint for a day, they'd probably have a
    few easels at their disposal and then just pay a fee.'
    Ahmed al Yafei, the chairman of Osan Properties, is developing the Art
    Hub in collaboration with Ms Meyer. When she approached him seeking
    help, he originally offered her a small corner of an old Musaffah
    paint factory to use as a studio.
    `But I always believed in the concept of big ideas - that good ideas
    will not work unless it's massive,' Mr al Yafei said. `I was building
    a project in Musaffah and I thought instead of making it a normal
    building, why not convert it into the requirements of the Art Hub?'

    He envisages `a franchise' of Art Hubs sprouting in Saadiyat island
    and even in other emirates.
    Ms Meyer, who will serve as the centre's creative director, is
    interviewing other artists to assess their needs from the facility.
    Linda Stephanian, 28, an Armenian-Iranian sculptress and the manager
    of the Ghaf Art Gallery, has been waiting for something like the Art
    Hub since her arrival in Abu Dhabi in 2006.

    Most of her artist friends, she said, were forced to make room to work
    in their homes. Ms Stephanian works with air-hardening clay and
    papier-mché in her kitchen and says the restricted space limits the
    scale of her creations.
    `My works are mostly small because of the space. If I have bigger
    space, I'll go for bigger sculptures.'
    Ms Stephanian has looked for space in Musaffah before, but could not
    find anything smaller than a whole warehouse.

    `I couldn't find a small space, but if [Art Hub] is affordable, I
    would definitely be looking for a studio there,' she said. `I think it
    will be really well accepted here since I know maybe eight or 10
    artists here who can't find affordable studio space to rent.'
    Given Abu Dhabi's ambition to become the cultural capital of the UAE,
    such a facility would be `a wonderful move', said Taha al Hiti, who
    runs Al Arjun Art Gallery on Al Najda Street. `Lots of artists will be
    benefiting from that project and I'm sure lots of great work will come
    from it.'

    Mr al Hiti, 38, an Iraqi-born architect and calligrapher, works from
    home, but said: `If I was a full-time artist and I lived through my
    artwork, I would definitely get a studio there.'
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