EAST LANSING, MI .- Sculptor Diana Al-Hadid defies centuries-old conventions of femininity and womanhood in unbecoming, on view June 7-Dec. 14 at the Eli and Edythe Broad Art Museum at Michigan State University (MSU Broad Art Museum). The survey exhibition features large-scale installations that consume the gallery and push visitors to adjust to their presence, standing in stark contrast to antiquated social norms that define a becoming woman as subtle and quiet.
Women are often told not to take up space, whether thats by physically getting out of the way, not sharing their opinions or being told to limit their emotions or reactions, said Rachel Winter, Ph.D., assistant curator. Taking up space puts a woman at risk of being deemed unbecoming. Diana Al-Hadids unbecoming invites visitors to rethink how expectations for women and definitions of unbecoming have taken shape over time and to embrace the unbecoming as full of potential.
unbecoming showcases nearly two decades of Al-Hadids career and marks the debut of four new works, a reinterpretation of Al-Hadids The Seventh Month (2015) and a new series of three works inspired by Scheherazade and Dunyazad in One Thousand and One Nights.
Al-Hadids work draws on diverse sources ranging from art history and Greek mythology to global literature. Often, narratives about women, even when seemingly told by them, are filtered through the male gaze and penned by authors who enforce narrow definitions of femininity. Al- Hadids visual language emerges from an astute sense of materiality that culminates in specific abstractions and reinterpretations that offer a counterpoint to these ideas. The works defy how we think about both materials and sculpture and, in turn, work to unravel the ways of thinking we may consider normal.
Several objects in the exhibition challenge ideas about familiar artworks and stories.
Lionless (2013), Hindsight (2020) and Deluge in the Allegory (2020) explore Hans Memlings 15th-century painting Allegory of Chastity, which depicts a shy virgin guarded by lions. Al-Hadids works address ideas about puritys alignment with the idea of a becoming woman.
Al-Hadid turns to Greek and Roman mythology to explore ideas about womens emotions in Blue Medusa (2023), Mad Medusa (2023) and Night Medusa (2023). Medusa is traditionally defined by her rage and frightening appearance, which can turn people to stone. Al- Hadid portrays her as soft and liquid and challenges notions that deem womens anger as socially unacceptable.
Visitors to unbecoming will also see Al-Hadids Spun of the Limits of my Lonely Waltz (2006), on view for the first time in the U.S. in almost 20 years.
The experience of seeing Diana Al-Hadids newest work goes hand in hand with seeing Spun of the Limits of my Lonely Waltz, which is one of the first large-scale sculptures she made after completing her graduate studies. While the work is significant in many ways, it can also be seen as marking the start of her professional career as a sculptor, and throughout the exhibition, we get to follow her journey across nearly two decades of work, said Winter.
Based in New York, Al-Hadid works prolifically between painting, sculpture and, more recently, handmade paper. Born in Syria in 1981, Al-Hadid moved to the United States as a child and grew up in Ohio. She earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts from Kent State University and a Master of Fine Arts from Virginia Commonwealth University.
The MSU Broad Art Museum has increasingly been focused on the role of the Midwest in shaping larger narratives in the arts and contributions to culture more broadly. In partnership with Diana Al-Hadid through this exhibition, we continue this work while highlighting one of the most significant artists working today, said Steven L. Bridges, interim director of the MSU Broad Art Museum. Were very proud to present the artists first solo exhibition in Michigan, which brings forward important and timely conversations around notions of femininity and womanhood while also celebrating her roots.
unbecoming is organized by the Eli and Edythe Broad Art Museum at Michigan State University and curated by Rachel Winter, Ph.D., assistant curator, with support from Laine Lord, former curatorial research assistant. Support for this exhibition is provided by the Eli and Edythe Broad Endowed Exhibitions Fund. Support for the accompanying publication Diana Al-Hadid: unbecoming is made possible by Kasmin Gallery, Lisa Applebaum and April Clobes. The museum also extends a special thanks to Kasmin and Dieu Donné. Dieu Donné is the leading non-profit cultural institution dedicated to serving emerging and established artists through the collaborative creation of contemporary art using the process of hand papermaking.
Diana Al-Hadid: unbecoming, a forthcoming publication from Kasmin Books, explores the artists practice with a curatorial essay by Winter, a conversation between Winter and Al- Hadid and an essay from art writer and editor Cassie Packard that examines the broader scope of Al-Hadids practice. The book is edited by Winter and Molly Taylor, director of communications at Kasmin, and distributed by Distributed Art Publishers.
The MSU Broad Art Museum is open Wednesday-Sunday from 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Admission is always free. Learn more at
broadmuseum.msu.edu.