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NY Times, August 19 2016
The Luxury Mall as Consumer Prison
By KAREN ROSENBERG

At art school in London a decade or so ago, the Qatari-American artist, writer and filmmaker Sophia Al-Maria came up with a pithy term, Gulf Futurism, to describe the warp-speed transformations of Dubai and other oil-rich cities: the rise of hotels, malls and museums and the incorporation of the area’s Bedouin tribes into an international consumer class. She has been elaborating on this catchphrase ever since, in videos and writings that combine sci-fi fantasies with dystopian musings on the human and environmental costs of hyperdevelopment.

Her 2013 article in Dazed magazine, for instance, written with the musician Fatima Al Qadiri, offered a neat summary of Gulf Futurism — as a phenomenon “marked by a deranged optimism about the sustainability of both oil reserves and late capitalism”— as well as examples ranging from the “alien ship” Sheraton Hotel in Doha, Qatar, designed by William Pereira to illuminated motorcycles straight out of “Tron.”

An even more concise manifesto of an installation is now at the Whitney Museum of American Art, in “Black Friday,” Ms. Al-Maria’s first solo exhibition in the United States. Comprising a short, suspenseful video (also titled “Black Friday”) set atop a sculptural scattering of small, flickering screens on a pile of sand, this exhibition turns the famously opulent malls of Doha, Qatar’s capital, into a kind of horror set. It’s instantly compelling, but offers just a taste of Ms. Al-Maria’s talents and range.

As chronicled in her 2012 memoir, “The Girl Who Fell to Earth,” Ms. Al-Maria was born in Washington State to an American mother and a Qatari father. While still a teenager, she left the Pacific Northwest for her grandmother’s home in Doha; later, she spent her undergraduate years in Cairo before attending Goldsmiths, University of London.

Goldsmiths is known for its freely interdisciplinary approach to art-making, and Ms. Al-Maria continues to work in multiple mediums: In addition to her short- and long-form writing and video art, she is working on a feature-length film, “Beretta,” which she describes as “a thriller about a lingerie salesgirl in Cairo who goes on an all-male killing rampage.”

She has made other works about female identity in the Muslim world: The memorable video installation “Sisters,” seen last year at the New Museum Triennial, incorporated YouTube and WhatsApp footage of young Arab women who had filmed themselves laughing and dancing in their bedrooms, turning spaces of confinement into public nightclubs. In title and spirit, “Sisters” seemed to shed light on a subtle feminist rebellion and a universal adolescent desire for community.

The subject of the Whitney show, the shopping mall, is the communal teenage space of decades past. The mall may be dying in America, but Ms. Al-Maria has seen it thrive in cities like Doha, where “Black Friday” is set. She describes it as a “weirdly neutral shared zone between cultures that are otherwise engaged in a sort of war of information and image,” as she wrote in an email exchange with Christopher Y. Lew, the Whitney associate curator who organized the exhibition.

“Black Friday” takes us inside an ostentatious and largely empty mall — actually two malls; it was filmed partly at the retail-entertainment complex the Villaggio and partly at another shopping center, Al Hazm, that is still under construction. We see, among other architectural features, the Villaggio’s indoor canal and ersatz Italian village streets, as well as the glass dome and double arcade of Al Hazm, modeled on the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II in Milan.

As the camera explores these cavernous spaces, ominous, staticky music and a portentous narration — most of it by the actor Sam Neill — makes you feel as if you’re watching a trailer for the latest alien-invasion blockbuster. (A sample: “This is where the glamorous heart of evil is born. And reborn. Not in the dark satanic mills of the 19th century, but in the bright fluorescent malls of the 21st.”)

Much as she did in “Sisters,” Ms. Al-Maria distorts the footage vertically, elongating the already imposing architecture to cathedral-like heights and giving the video’s few figures an El Greco-esque ethereality. This strategy is especially effective in the opening sequence, which stretches, flattens and defamiliarizes an otherwise banal set of escalators.

Elsewhere, though, Ms. Al-Maria has a heavy hand with the special effects, so that the mall spins, melts or suddenly blazes fuchsia and orange. Maybe this is deliberate amateurism, a nod to B-movie sci-fi, but it undercuts some of the more affecting moments in “Black Friday”— as when the camera pulls back to show the small silhouette of a woman in a black abaya who has collapsed on a vast marble floor. There’s a hint that something more ominous than shopper fatigue — war? terrorism? socioeconomic collapse caused by plunging oil prices? — has felled her.

Generally, not a lot of commerce seems to be happening in “Black Friday.” Mainly, the camera lingers on the mall’s architecture of entrapment and disorientation. In interviews, Ms. Al-Maria has cited the architect Victor Gruen, whose designs for American malls as early as the 1950s encouraged shoppers to lose their bearings in order to deliver extra sales, an effect known as the Gruen Transfer. She has also described her personal experience of malls: “It’s this temperature-controlled hellscape and you have to buy your way out.”

The notion that the shopping mall is an environment of insidious control and dangerous distraction has inspired many artistic critiques, from Walter Benjamin’s “The Arcades Project” to Dan Graham’s video “Death by Chocolate: West Edmonton Shopping Mall.” Works about architecture, globalism and dystopia by Andreas Gursky, Sarah Morris and the sisters Jane and Louise Wilson, also come to mind. Of course, context matters; in “Black Friday,” we are looking at a Western phenomenon transplanted to the rising cities of the Gulf, a mass diversion with additional imperialist baggage.

Even if some ideas in “Black Friday” feel dated, Ms. Al-Maria emerges as a strong and authentic voice. It feels significant that she is making her solo debut in the United States at a museum dedicated to American art, particularly at a time when politics is rife with anti-Muslim bigotry and misunderstandings about Islam.

And within the smaller context of the art world, where some big museums must weigh horrific labor conditions if they pursue expansions in the Gulf region, Ms. Al-Maria’s dark vision of Gulf Futurism feels especially pertinent.

Yet, watching “Black Friday,” I sometimes wished for more of the technopessimism and autobiographical candor found in Ms. Al-Maria’s writing — as in her piece for Bidoun on an Emirati cartoon sitcom inspired by “The Golden Girls,” or her experimental essay “The Gaze of Sci-Fi Wahabi,” a “theoretical pulp fiction and serialized videographic adventure” (with nods to J. G. Ballard), on subversive uses of Bluetooth networks in the Gulf, circa 2007.

It’s there, at least, at the very start of “Black Friday,” when Ms. Al-Maria can be heard recalling an out-of-context encounter with a high school classmate from America at the mall in Doha. He is in the military, she observes from his buzz cut and combat boots; she is standing behind him on the escalator, “probably looking like a picture from their target practice,” she says. “There was this insurmountable distance.” This memory adds richness and texture to the generic paranoia and suspense of “Black Friday”; the mall isn’t just a palatial prison, but also a tragic space of cultural and political reification.

“Sophia Al-Maria: Black Friday” runs through Oct. 31 at the Whitney Museum of American Art, 99 Gansevoort Street, Manhattan; 212-570-3600, whitney.org.
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