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NARRATIVES OF COLORS

  • Writer: Stal gallery
    Stal gallery
  • 4 days ago
  • 4 min read

10 JULY 2025 - 31 AUGUST 2025



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Cultural Memory and Modern Identity Intersect at Stal Gallery’s Summer Exhibition


Stal Gallery & Studio has officially opened its annual summer exhibition, Summer 2025: The

Contemporary Perspective, inviting the public into a vibrant conversation about Oman’s evolving

artistic identity. The exhibition, which runs until August 31 at the gallery’s space in Madinat Al

Sultan Qaboos, Muscat, showcases works by seven Omani artists - each exploring the complex

intersections of memory, place, and personal expression.

The exhibition draws from a wide palette of mediums and artistic approaches. From abstract

painting and mixed-media installations to textile-based pieces and narrative collages, the works

reflect a deeply personal yet collectively resonant engagement with the past and present.

Exhibition explores a cultural moment where Oman’s past and present are in constant dialogue.

Each artist brings a distinct emotional frequency, shaped by their materials and their relationship

to identity, memory, and landscape. Together, their voices build a mosaic that speaks not only

to the soul of the region but to the universal impulse to preserve and reinterpret who we are.

Among the featured artists is H.H Sayyida Afra Talal Al Said, whose work is being

exhibited at Stal Gallery for the first time. Her debut marks a significant moment, not only

in her personal artistic journey but within the larger context of contemporary art in

Oman. In Shades of Oman, H.H Sayyida Afra Talal Al Said introduces a series of mixed-

media paintings that blend traditional Omani fabrics with the natural motif of palm frond

shadows—a familiar sight across the Omani landscape. The layered textures, subtle

color palettes, and fabric integrations offer a meditative experience for the viewer.

Drawing from her deep connection to nature and the textures of local life, her works

move between the physical and the emotional, between what is seen and what is

remembered.


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H.H Sayyida Afra Talal Al Said use of materials is intentional and symbolic. The textiles

speak to cultural heritage, while the soft interplay of shadow and color creates a

contemplative atmosphere. Her technique offers a quiet, almost spiritual rhythm. Afra

paints not only what she observes, but what she holds within - memories, landscapes,

and emotions filtered through texture and tone.


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Also featured is Anwar Sonya, a pioneering figure in Oman’s contemporary art scene. Known

for his bold, expressionist style, Sonya revisits the traditional bullfighting rituals of Mussanah,

translating the raw energy and cultural symbolism of these events into powerful, color-saturated

canvases. His work serves as a visual archive, capturing a tradition that is both visceral and

deeply rooted in Omani heritage.


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Idris Al Hooti contributes a quietly nostalgic series titled Mutrah Memories, portraying the subtle

textures of Muscat’s historic district - palm trees silhouetted against fading buildings, quiet

streets imbued with memory. His brushstrokes carry a sense of longing, inviting viewers to

reflect on spaces that are disappearing or transforming with time.


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In contrast, Omani artist Hassan Meer - a pivotal figure in the country’s contemporary art

scene, with exhibitions both locally and internationally - presents a series of deeply personal

impasto paintings that explore themes of identity and metaphysics. Works such as Father and

Son and Omani Women Gathering use thick, expressive strokes to convey themes of family,

collective memory, and spiritual continuity. Meer’s art often delves into the unseen - the

emotions and cultural threads that bind generations together.


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Suha Salim, an emerging voice in the Omani art scene, introduces a new cubist-inspired series

titled Distraction. Her fragmented compositions explore the mental and emotional fragmentation of modern life. Through sharp angles, layered geometries, and disjointed forms, her work

examines interiority - what lies beneath the surface of daily experience.


Hussain Obaid, long regarded for his contributions to Oman’s contemporary plastic art

movement, returns with compositions rooted in ancient Omani visual symbols. His work layers

history with abstraction, inviting viewers to decode motifs drawn from tribal patterns, maritime

heritage, and desert iconography. His pieces act as bridges - linking the ancestral past with the

visual language of today.


Completing the exhibition is the late Moosa Omar, whose final series Hearts of Departed

reflects his lifelong engagement with the environment and spirituality. Using jute - a humble

material common in Omani crafts - he forms textured, circular compositions that evoke both the

physical terrain and the metaphysical. His work is a quiet tribute to memory and loss, grounded

in earth-tones and tactile presence.


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Together, the seven artists offer not only a survey of Omani contemporary practice but a shared

meditation on the themes of identity, place, and transformation. Through their distinct voices,

the exhibition captures a moment in time - one that holds space for tradition while embracing

innovation.


The Contemporary Perspective is more than an art show - it’s a living archive of how Oman’s

artists are responding to the world around them. It’s about how they remember, how they

reinterpret, and how they imagine what’s next.

The exhibition is open to the public and free of charge until August 31, 2025, at Stal Gallery &

Studio, Madinat Al Sultan Qaboos, Muscat. Visitors are encouraged to experience the full

breadth of the works on display - and to engage with the stories embedded in every piece.


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© Stal Gallery and Studio

Supported by: Alserkal Group


 
 
 

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