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Alumni Entrepreneur: Artist Alia Al Eghfeli #Proud_ZUAlumni

Artist Alia Al Eghfeli Participation at Dubai Design Week, Dubai Design District, November 2020 - #Proud_ZUAlumni.

Participation 1: Designed an exhibition titled "FashCultivate" for 1971 Design Space.

VENUE: Building No. 5, Dubai Design District

9 November, 2020 – 14 November, 2020

Exhibition description:

1971 – Design Space presents FashCultivate at Dubai Design Week 2020. The exhibition celebrates date palms for being one of the most cherished gifts of nature and their importance throughout the history of human civilization. Date palms (Phoenix Dactylifera) have become a part of the cultural and historical identity of the Gulf Region playing an important role in the region’s economy. Curated by Khulood Bin Thani and Fatma Al Mahmoud (both ZU Alumni Artists #Proud_ZUAlumni), seven Gulf-based designers worked on commissioned pieces within the areas of textiles, handmade objects and architecture. True to the exhibition title, the designers researched date palms and their cultivation extensively, thereby defining certain narratives, aligning them with their own ideas and merging them into their own, hand-crafted results. These commissions reference various functions of date palm trees as well as their fibres, colours, structures, nourishments, haptics and inherent beauty.

The exhibition theme is also mirrored in the bespoke exhibition design itself, created by the Sharjah-based Interior/Product Designer Alya Al Ghfeli. In addition to the commissions, the curators initiated a research study with Irthi Contemporary Crafts Council in which experts working in laboratories created a new material fabricated out of the date palm.

Participation 2: Host Lamp was exhibited at Tashkeel's stand.

VENUE: Building No. 5, Dubai Design District

9 November, 2020 – 14 November, 2020

Lamp description:

“Their lavish hospitality had always made me uncomfortable, for I had known that as a result of it they would go hungry for days”

Wilfred Thesiger

'Arabian Sands' (Longmans, Green & Co, London, 1959)

In his book, Thesiger talks about his travels across the Arabian Desert and first-hand experience of the Bedouin spirit of generosity. Hospitality in this region stems back to those dif cult days when the human contact in the vast, desolate landscape was rare and thus cherished. Hosts would offer everything they had to guests as a sign of honour. Living in the desert has shaped the Bedouin character and instilled in them rituals around hospitality that continue to be respected and upheld today.

The Emirati culture is deeply rooted within its people. It cannot be profoundly appreciated without interaction – experiencing its very essence through the hospitality. One of the most prominent and widespread forms is the complex yet sophisticated etiquette of coffee. Served according to its many codes, it is the ultimate symbol of hospitality. An Emirati will never fail in offering a cup of coffee to welcome and honour their guests.

Host Lamp explores the cultural trait of hospitality as well as the art of making and serving Arabic coffee through a contemporary lighting fixture that captures the movement of the serving ritual. In an interactive journey, the fixture allows the user to control the light intensity by moving a slider in the same direction as coffee is poured, allowing them to indirectly be the host. Acts of hospitality and generosity may be small but they often have a large impact on both host and guest. One cup of coffee tells the guest that they are welcome, honoured and that the host is delighted to have them. This is what this fixture illustrates: How a single, slight movement from their side triggers a larger lighting effect, radiating warmth and illuminating a coffee resin hemisphere. This echoes the warmth that the guest experiences from an act of generosity.

The form of the lamp was derived from many live observations and documentation of the coffee ritual. Moreover, the coffee within the resin has been recycled from a traditional Emirati majlis that is full of guests every single day. The coffee residue left at the bottom of the pot has then been dried in the sun, sifted and mixed with the epoxy resin. Host Lamp is a blend of tradition and innovation, aligning it with the country’s quest for modernity yet keeping true to its values and roots. Fashioned from resin, brass-plated steel and coffee grounds, handcrafted in the UAE, it is intended to illuminate public and social spaces, bringing the intangible elements of Emirati culture into the lived world.

To know more about artist Alya, check her Instagram account: alya.aleghfeli 

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