ALL MANNER OF EXPERIMENTS:

LEGACIES OF THE BAGHDAD MODERN ART GROUP

February 12–June 7, 2026


Curated by Nada Shabout


Faraj Abbo, Sadik Kwaish Alfraji, Himat Mohammad Ali, Rasoul Alwan, Suad al-Attar, Qahtan Awni, Dia al-Azzawi, Bogus Bablanian, Amar Dawod, Ghassan Ghaib, Faiq (Faeq) Hassan, Mohammed Ghani Hikmat, Jabra Ibrahim Jabra, Rand Abdul Jabbar, Fouad Jihad, Saadi Al Kaabi, Ardash Kakafian, Salma Khoury, Hanaa Malallah, Mahmoud Obaidi, Widad al-Orfali, Khalid al-Rahal, Kareem Risan, Miran al-Saadi, Mahmoud Sabri, Naziha Salim, Nizar (Nazar) Salim, Shakir Hassan Al Said, Delair Shaker, Jewad Selim, Lorna Selim, Walid Siti, Ismail Fattah (Al-Turk), Madiha Umar, Khalil al-Ward, and Nazar Yahya.


The following question will linger in the artist’s mind: by what means will this new art be realized? Various answers will tempt his thoughts, and he will carry out all manner of experiments, as his head, eyes, and hands dictate.

—Baghdad Modern Art Group manifesto

Curated by Nada Shabout, All Manner of Experiments: Legacies of the Baghdad Modern Art Group will be on view in the NYU Abu Dhabi Art Gallery through June 7. Active in the mid-20th Century, the Baghdad Modern Art Group was established in 1951 by two of Iraq’s most influential artists, Jewad Selim (1919–1961) and Shakir Hassan Al Said (1925–2004), and grew to engage many of Iraq’s leading artists, architects, poets, and more. Together, they sought to develop a new art form, one that negotiated a time of globally inflected modernism from Baghdad, an Abbasid city (est. 762 CE) that traces its lineage to the ancient civilizations of Mesopotamia. In this exhibition, Dr. Shabout brings together the artists from this circle, as well as those whom its work influenced, both at the time and in the following generations.

After the Kingdom of Iraq’s formation in 1932 as an independent state, Iraqi artists explored the new parameters of the secularized, modern society that was emerging following Britain’s maneuvering to dismantle the Ottoman Empire. Artists questioned the ability of traditional “Islamic art” practices to present their contemporary realities, searching for a more effective visual language. In this context, modern art provided a conduit for exploration and was perceived by Iraqi artists as a global space of shared humanity.

Following their studies at art academies, mostly in Western Europe, where they viewed their own ancient heritage in European museums, Iraqi artists understood modernism’s roots in many non-Western cultures and became eager to make their own contributions to its development. At the same time, they were conscious of their role in their newly formed nation, alongside broader decolonization processes. Their practices thus also involved unpacking the nation’s history, seeking to identify a collective “Iraqiness” among the diverse factions of society. Various artist groups launched initiatives to convey the importance of national representation through culture, which included promoting the modern art movement in Iraq. This period set the stage for Iraq’s so-called golden age of the 1950s: a time of maturation for a generation of artists pivotal in initiating rigorous standards of art theory and practice, thus charting new possibilities for future generations.

The experimental ethos of the group continue to resonate today beyond Baghdad to direct and connect contemporary Iraqi artists around the world to each other.

Opening Reception: Monday, February 12, 5 PM

Curator Biography

Dr. Nada Shabout is a Visiting Professor of Art History and a Senior Investigator at al Mawrid Arab Center for the Study of art at NYUAD. She is the founding president of the Association for Modern and Contemporary Art from the Arab World, Iran and Turkey (AMCA) and founding director of Modern Art Iraq Archive (MAIA). Shabout has published widely on modern and contemporary Arab and Iraqi art. She is the author of Modern Arab Art: Formation of Arab Aesthetics, University of Florida Press, 2007; co-editor with Salwa Mikdadi of New Vision: Arab Art in the 21st Century, Thames & Hudson, 2009; and co-editor with Anneka Lenssen and Sarah Rogers of Modern Art in the Arab World: Primary Documents, Museum of Modern Art, New York, 2018. Notable among exhibitions she has curated: All Manner of Experiment: Legacies of the Baghdad Modern Art Group, Hessle Museum, CCS Bard, 2025; A Banquette for Seaweed: Snapshots from the Arab 1980s, 2022-2023; Sajjil: A Century of Modern Art, 2010; traveling exhibition, Dafatir: Contemporary Iraqi Book Art, 2005-2009; and co-curator, Modernism and Iraq, 2009. Major awards of her research include Getty Foundation Grant, 2019; Writers Grant, Andy Warhol Foundation 2018; The American Academic Research Institute in Iraq (TAARII) fellow 2006, 2007, Fulbright Senior Scholar Program, 2008. She received the Presidential Excellency Award, UNT 2018 and the 2020 Kuwait Prize for Arts and Literature from the Kuwait Foundation for the Advancement of Sciences. Shabout was the Project Advisor for the Saudi National Pavilion, Venice Biennale 2019, and on the Founding Board of Directors, Visual Art Commission, Ministry of Culture, Saudi Arabia (2020-2023 and 2024-2027); she serves on the Board of The Academic Research Institute in Iraq (TARII); and served on the College Art Association (caa) Board of Directors (2020-2024). She is currently co-editing with Anneka Lenssen and Sarah Rogers forthcoming from AUCP: 1980s: Representational Pressures, Departures, and Beginnings in the Arab World, Iran, and Turkey.