From January 30, 2026 to June 07, 2026
Farah Al Qasimi: Psychic Repair unfolds as a vivid, immersive experience that blurs the boundaries between image, sound, and belief. Installed across the SCAD Museum of Art’s façade vitrines and interior gallery, the exhibition plays with shifts in scale and dimension, inviting viewers to navigate a visual environment that feels at once intimate and overwhelming. Al Qasimi’s saturated palette and layered compositions reflect a world shaped by constant exposure, where identity is performed, adjusted, and endlessly reframed.
Rooted in memories of growing up in the United Arab Emirates and shaped by her life in the United States, Al Qasimi’s work explores how rituals of self-presentation take form across cultures. Her photographs examine everyday gestures, domestic interiors, and symbolic objects, revealing how beauty, fashion, and personal style become tools for meaning-making. These images oscillate between documentation and fantasy, suggesting that belief systems are often built not through grand narratives, but through small, repeated acts of looking and being looked at.
The exhibition’s visual language draws inspiration from early internet aesthetics and commercial display strategies. Overlapping images, vinyl prints, and architectural interventions recall pop-up windows and storefront vitrines, where desire is carefully staged. Al Qasimi moves fluidly between analog and digital processes, using patterns, textures, and shadows to create spaces where the real and the imagined coexist. Her approach reflects a generation shaped by screens, where memory is fragmented and emotion circulates at high speed.
Sound plays a crucial role in Psychic Repair. Through music videos and audio works, Al Qasimi transforms jump-rope chants, spoken poetry, and punk-inflected songs into hypnotic refrains. These sonic elements function as modern incantations, reinforcing the exhibition’s interest in the supernatural as a metaphor for unseen cultural forces. Beauty standards, online hierarchies, and consumer fantasies appear as invisible energies that quietly influence behavior and self-perception.
Across photography, film, and music, Al Qasimi embraces collaboration and storytelling as acts of resistance to fixed meaning. Her anthropomorphized narrators and unexpected performers introduce humor and vulnerability, echoing the logic of children’s cartoons while addressing adult anxieties. Psychic Repair ultimately offers a space for reflection, proposing art as a site where fragmented identities can be examined, reassembled, and momentarily healed through imagination and play.
Image:
Farah Al Qasimi, "Leopard Print Blanket," 2022, archival inkjet print. Courtesy of the artist and François Ghebaly, Los Angeles. © Farah Al Qasimi