Khalil Rabah
I Want to Be With You

October 5 - November 16, 2024

Khalil Rabah, I Want to Be With You (1998) (video still).
Video, color, sound
13’45’’ 

Khalil Rabah, Body and Sole (1995) (video still).
Video, color, silent
2’35’’ 

When I was young, I was terrible at math. My mom would get upset with me because my grades were so bad. So, for the next exam, she worked a lot with me to prepare and when the grades came out, I had gotten an A+. I remember being so happy. I rushed back home that afternoon to tell my mom the good news. When I got home, I opened the front door, and I remember hearing a loud pounding sound. I felt scared at first, I didn’t know what the sound was, and slowly walked into the house and through to the kitchen where the sound was coming from. There, I found my mom, sitting at the kitchen table. She was holding a stone in her hand, smashing a heap of olives. One by one, she cracked the olives with her stone, preparing them for pickling. I remember interrupting her rythm with the good news. She stopped everything she was doing and jumped from her seat to give me a hug, she even gave me a dollar or two, I can’t remember the currency. I don’t know why, but I never forgot about that moment or the feeling of returning home that afternoon. I still have the same stone she used that day, more than fifty years ago. That’s why I titled the video, I want to be with you. I want to be with my mom, I want to be at home.

Brief Histories presents I Want to Be With You by Khalil Rabah, on view from October 5, until November 16, 2024. The exhibition brings together early works and considers a pivotal period in Rabah’s conceptual artistic practice where themes of performance, action, and duration take shape in his experimental and interdisciplinary approach.

Tracing an artistic investigation into the lasting impacts of power and control, both personal and collective, as they manifest in the physical and conceptual boundaries of the institution, the landscape and body politics, Rabah’s work is constantly inverting questions: to ask about what it is not, and in this way, it invents its own identity. Performance is a critical component of Rabah’s practice and it unfolds throughout the artworks, structures, and institutions the artist produces, such as The Palestinian Museum of Natural History and Humankind, replete with facts entwined with cultural genealogies and branches of departments that protect vulnerable histories while preserving their imagination. 

The artworks in I Want to Be With You are a precursor to the Museum’s Future of Ethnographic Collections, which is made up of a constellation of actions, images, and videos recorded in Palestine in the 1990’s. In these works, Rabah references embodied experiences with an incisive examination on the intersections of performance, existence, bearing witness, disappearance, record, and memory. In the video installation Body and Sole (1995), the artist performs a struggle with a shoe, and in the video work Critical Interrogations, Renewed Belief (1999), we see two figures performing a shoulder leap in front of an olive tree in a field in Ramallah. In I Want To Be With You (1998), which was recorded in the artist’s backyard, the camera is tightly zoomed in on olives as they are being cracked one by one with a stone. These video works also travel back to a period when the artist recorded and questioned the self, the signification of the performing body, and one’s personal and collective conditions. Photographs and sculptural installations ground the exhibition; Incubation (1995-2017), made up of coils of embroidery threads submerged in olive oil in a steel tray, and Inside Out (2002), composed of an old wardrobe and a hanging suit, transform the gallery into a site of both uncertain absence and anticipation of arrival.

Khalil Rabah (b. 1961, Palestine) Solo exhibitions include Fondazione Merz (2024); Sharjah Art Foundation, UAE (2023); Casa Árabe, Madrid (2016); Kunsthaus Hamburg (2015); e-flux, New York (2013); and Beirut Art Center (2012). Group exhibitions include Manifesta 12 Palermo (2018); the Sharjah Biennial (2017); the Marrakech Biennale (2016); the Kochi-Muziris Biennale (2014); and the Venice Biennale (2009). Rabah’s work is held in numerous prestigious collections, including MACRO, Rome; The British Museum, London; The Guggenheim, Abu Dhabi; and Kunsthaus Zurich. He studied Fine Arts and Architecture at the University of Texas. Rabah is the initiator and artistic director of the Riwaq Biennale and a co-founder of Al Ma’mal Foundation for Contemporary Art in Jerusalem. He served on the curricular committee of Ashkal Alwan’s Home Workspace Program in Beirut, Lebanon, from 2011 to 2015.

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Fia Backström