CHILDREN OF THE WORLD | RACHID KHIMOUNE


  • Artists : RACHID KHIMOUNE 
  • Venue : ARTSAWA | ALQUOZ
  • Preview : 19 March 2009
  • Start Date : 19 March 2009 Time : 10:00 AM
  • End Date : 10 May 2009 Time : 11:00 PM

    CHILDREN OF THE WORLD

    Under the joint patronage of His Excellency Mr. Alain Azouaou, Ambassador of France to the UAE and of the Dubai Culture and Art Authority, artsawa showcases an exhibition on a scale rarely seen in Dubai. “Children of the World” is a monumental collection of sculptures by the renowned French artist Rachid Khimoune. 

    The work comprises twenty-one remarkable bronze-cast sculptures depicting twenty-one children from all over the world, twenty-one being a metaphor for the 21st century in which the works were created.  Rachid Khimoune’s artistic approach is rich, unique, and contemporary and appeals to an international audience: the artist has traveled the world searching for the original roots of his subjects and their cities.

    This is a truly inspirational and universal project and is particularly relevant to the youthful city of Dubai, UAE, where it will stand as a symbol of the complex relationship between art, history and the city’s diverse urban communities. The UAE, with its vibrant and multicultural human landscape, is the ideal and natural host for this great work of art.

    The scope of this exhibition befits the nature of Rachid Khimoune’s art: over eight years of creation, travel and immersion in the urban components of twenty-one international cities have resulted in an extraordinary body of work. “Children of the World” explores and uncovers the diversity of the world’s people and is as inimitable as the different cultures it portrays.

    Each piece is layered with the stories of cities and their people, and these became embedded in each cast as a visual expression of a historical and human archive. He has captured “the skins of the streets”, molded their paving stones, drain covers and broken bitumen to produce works of art quite unlike any other.

    The urban theme is the central focus and the inspiration of his work. Khimoune explains, “Although all streets seem to be the same, sewer plants and grids around trees are as different from one city to another as tattoos on skin. These are the symbols that represent identity and document the history or memory of the city.”

    CATALOG