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Sunday, November 30, 2025 |
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| Rosalind Nashashibi's Stones unveils new paintings and Electrical Gaza in landmark KM21 showcase |
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Rosalind Nashashibi, Gaza, 2021.
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THE HAGUE.- From 29 November 2025, KM21 presents Stones: the first solo museum exhibition in the Netherlands of the Palestinian British artist Rosalind Nashashibi (1973). Her work explores collective history, power structures and modes of coexistence. Nashashibi captures everyday intimate moments in a highly personal way. The exhibition features a selection of recent and new paintings together with the film Electrical Gaza, in which the artist shows Gaza as if under an enchantment, constantly transforming from the reality of a besieged strip into its magical other and making us aware that the truth lies in both depictions.
Electrical Gaza
The 16mm film Electrical Gaza (2015) depicts a still intact and lively Gaza, shot in 2014 before the Israeli attacks on the area. Nashashibi fuses footage of daily life with animations and a hypnotic soundscape, giving seemingly everyday scenes an alienating atmosphere. This charged situation has since been overtaken by the ongoing two year onslaught by Israel, lending the work new layers of meaning ten years on.
A Stone held in the Hand
The film is surrounded by and enters into a dialogue with Nashashibis recent and new paintings, which have a lush and surreal appearance. They incorporate motifs from art history such as swans, crosses and flowers and from the grim political landscape, including hands holding stones, references to the UNRWA refugee agency and colour fields that resemble a flag. The title Stones embodies this layered complexity. Stones have meaning for Palestinians in many ways: they form buildings and symbolise history, resilience and perseverance. But they can also represent resistance and/or destruction.
Nashashibis works encourage us to look with fresh eyes.
With Stones, were building on one of our new programming pillars, Global Connections, in which voices from around the world offer new perspectives on our times. Nashashibis strength lies in her works complex layering, in which she weaves the everyday with urgent political realities, reminding us of the necessity of human connection. Margriet Schavemaker, director of Kunstmuseum Den Haag
Rosalind Nashashibi
Rosalind Nashashibi (1973, UK) lives and works in London. She was nominated for the Turner Prize in 2017 and was artist-in-residence at the National Gallery in London in 2020. Her work is held in museum collections including Tate in London, the Art Institute of Chicago, the Museum of Modern Art and the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.
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