The thesis maps the ‘awakening’ of the author’s artistic practice and her identity as a female Arab
Muslim painter through her studio-based research into Rumi’s writings, in conjunction with study of
the Qur’an and Islamic teachings, informed by feminist ideas and enhanced by knowledge of the
socio-political histories and cultures of Kuwait and the Arabian Gulf. This practice-led research
project considers the role of the woman and the female artist in contemporary Kuwait by exploring
new contexts for, and approaches to, contemporary painting in that country and the Middle East.
Kuwait has sought to find a coherent and progressive cultural identity since the two Gulf Wars
(1990–91, 2003–11). This project contributes to the development of that new identity by proposing
a fusion of traditional and contemporary considerations, leading to an experimental, propositional
body of work developed through theoretical and contextual investigation. The theoretical research
considers and reinterprets specific traditional cultural practices of the Middle East, in particular
Persian painting and the Sufi poetry of Rumi, to provide grounding references relevant to a painting
practice. The research considers also the impact of feminism upon female thinkers and artists, both
in the West and the Middle East, in order to provide a perspective on gender politics in Kuwait. This
thesis thereby outlines a pathway for a contemporary female Kuwaiti artist to enter cultural,
aesthetic, religious and political dialogue with her immediate cultural environment and her artistic
and academic peers in Kuwait and beyond.
The paintings that emerged through studio-based practice generated a method of performative
mark-making that uses a personal iconography of abstracted and symbolic imagery of Arabic
calligraphy and pictorial expression. The body of work, the practice component and the written
exposition, combines, in both method and subject matter, Islamic and Western traditions, to
formulate a dynamic self-contained dialogue, yet one also underpinned by an understanding of key
components that both traditions have to offer a global cultural arena. This thesis, therefore, creates
new knowledge through charting the author’s journey of awakening and evolution of an innovative
visual language within the emergent field of painting by contemporary Arab women artists, in
particular those of her home country, Kuwait.
Date of Award | 2023 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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Supervisor | Kayla Parker (Other Supervisor) |
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Islamic Tradition and Innovation in a Contemporary Kuwaiti Woman’s Painting Practice
Almehana, S. (Author). 2023
Student thesis: PhD