The Shape of Meaning: Highlights From the Al Burda Collection

19 November, 2025
25 January, 2026

In Collaboration with the UAE Ministry of Culture

This exhibition is presented in partnership with the UAE Ministry of Culture, the institution behind the Al Burda Award. An initiative established in 2004 to support and celebrate excellence in Islamic arts. Over two decades, the Ministry has played a central role in preserving, advancing, and reimagining Arabic calligraphy by encouraging artists to explore the script through both classical craftsmanship and contemporary expression.

 

Through the Al Burda Award and its evolving cultural initiatives, the Ministry continues to nurture artistic talent, foster cross-cultural dialogue, and strengthen the presence of Islamic arts within the global cultural landscape. The collaboration on The Shape of Meaning reflects a shared commitment to supporting creativity, empowering artists, and expanding public access to the region’s artistic heritage.

The Shape of Meaning brings together outstanding works from past editions of the Al Burda Award (2008–2023), offering a contemporary exploration of Arabic calligraphy as both a visual abstraction and a vessel of linguistic meaning. The exhibition examines how artists today reinterpret one of the most historic art forms in the Arab world, approaching script through innovation, experimentation, and deep respect for tradition.


Through diverse techniques, materials, and conceptual approaches, the featured artists expand the expressive possibilities of Arabic script. Some treat calligraphy as a purely visual structure, distilling letters into form, rhythm, and geometry. While others remain rooted in textual meaning, transforming verses, prayers, and poetic fragments into compositions that carry cultural, spiritual, and historical resonance.


Presented alongside the retrospective of Tunisian calligraphic abstraction artist Nja Mahdaoui Exhibition in the Main Gallery, The Shape of Meaning creates a dialogue across generations and geographies. It highlights calligraphy as a living tradition: one that bridges past and present, imagination and heritage, personal expression and collective identity.


The exhibition is accompanied by an educational programme that includes workshops, talks, and engagements designed to deepen public understanding of Arabic script and its contemporary relevance.


Zaid Amed Amin,
ولد الهدى فالكائنات ضياء وفم الزمان تبسم وثناء
2011
200 × 200 cm
Acrylic on canvas
Courtesy of UAE Ministry of Culture
Ali Rda Mohbi,
هو الحبيب الذي ترجى شفاعته لكل هول من الأهوال مقتحم
2010
250 × 200 cm
Acrylic on canvas
Courtesy of UAE Ministry of Culture
Mahsa Javed Davashi,
مطر
2021
150 x 150 cm
Acrylic on canvas
Courtesy of UAE Ministry of Culture
Taj AlSer Hassan,
سرت بشائر بالهادي ومولده في الشرق والغرب مسرى النور في الظلم
2016
190 × 210 cm
Acrylic on canvas
Courtesy of UAE Ministry of Culture

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