Between Heritage and Globalization: Art and Power in the Gulf States

The Gulf offers a unique opportunity to rethink curatorial practice

By Zeta Tzioti

We are living through a period of profound transformation in the global art landscape. Traditional cultural structures are being questioned, dismantled, and reconfigured, while new centers of influence are emerging. The UAE, Qatar, and Saudi Arabia are positioning themselves as significant players. They are no longer peripheral observers but active participants in shaping cultural discourse.

Yet these ecosystems remain in a formative phase. Strong institutional frameworks, ambitious museum projects, and growing art markets exist alongside a still-developing alternative scene and a critical mass of independent artistic voices. In Europe, alternative movements historically emerged from avant-garde experimentation, financial scarcity, and resistance to political or institutional authority. In the Gulf, the context is very different. Cultural expansion is largely state-driven, well-funded, and strategically structured. The socio-political conditions that gave rise to European avant-gardes do not exist in the same way here. This raises a compelling question: can alternative scenes emerge not from opposition, but from artistic experimentation itself? Perhaps in the Gulf, the alternative will not be a reaction against institutions, but a parallel language growing within them.

The role of the curator is evolving alongside these transformations. Historically, curators moved from collectors and exhibitors to authors and producers. After Marcel Duchamp, the exhibition itself became a conceptual gesture. Harald Szeemann’s landmark 1969 exhibition When Attitudes Become Form exemplified this shift, redefining curating as a form of authorship. Today, another transformation is underway. Curators are increasingly engaging with AI-based artistic production. Artificial intelligence is no longer simply a tool; it is a new language, with its own syntax, logic, and philosophical implications. Responsible curating requires understanding this language, often learning directly from the artists themselves.

This evolution raises deeper questions about the future of the curatorial role. Will it continue as we know it, or will it transform into something hybrid, shared with algorithms, collective intelligences, or even post-human entities? One element, however, remains constant: the need for mediation —someone—or something—capable of creating meaningful connections among works, contexts, and audiences.

The curatorial vision must be rooted in plurality. The future of art will not revolve around a single dominant center, whether Western or otherwise. It has to be polycentric, shaped by multiple geographies, technologies, and cultural epistemologies. Curators must weave these narratives together without flattening their differences, creating platforms where local identities can speak in their own voices while engaging in global dialogue.

The Gulf offers a unique opportunity to rethink curatorial practice. New art centers are emerging, not to replicate existing Western models, but to redefine them. Here, curating can operate as cultural translation, research, production, and ethical mediation, responding to an increasingly interconnected yet fragmented world. This, I believe, is the future of curating: a truly global practice that is inclusive, critically aware, and open to futures we are only beginning to imagine.

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Zeta Tz
Zeta Tz
Zeta is active in translation, cultural journalism, and editorial direction within the arts and media landscape. With a strong presence in the cultural sector, she has also curated and organized visual art exhibitions and initiatives focused on social responsibility. Her work has been recognized with an honorary distinction from the Botsis Foundation 2022 for her contribution to cultural journalism. At Artviews.gr, she leads the editorial team, shaping the platform’s voice and curatorial direction with a keen eye for contemporary culture.

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