437 N. Paulina St
Youssef Nabil: No One Knows but the Sky unfolds at Mariane Ibrahim as a deeply introspective journey through memory, cinema, and the passage of time. The exhibition gathers works spanning two decades, where photography and film merge into a singular, poetic language. For Nabil, cinema does not simply inform his aesthetic; it shapes his way of seeing, rooted in early encounters with the golden age of Egyptian film culture and its enduring visual legacy.
His images carry the atmosphere of another era, where gestures appear suspended and color feels both vivid and melancholic. Each photograph begins as a black-and-white print before being meticulously hand-colored, echoing the techniques of vintage film posters once seen across Cairo. This process transforms the image into something intimate and tactile, resisting the reproducibility of digital photography. The figures within these works—often artists, performers, or symbolic presences—seem caught between worlds, embodying a quiet awareness of time slipping away.
Nabil’s films extend this meditation, weaving together personal history and collective memory. In works such as
The Beautiful Voyage, reflections on life unfold through voice, landscape, and movement, while
The Room approaches the threshold between life and death with a sense of calm surrender. Collaborations with figures from cinema and performance introduce a layered narrative space, where reality and fiction blur. These moving images do not seek resolution; instead, they dwell in the uncertainty of existence, where departure and arrival remain intertwined.
Throughout
No One Knows but the Sky, the act of remembering becomes central. Nabil does not attempt to preserve the past as it was, but reimagines it through a cinematic lens that embraces loss and transformation. His work suggests that images hold a fragile permanence, capable of outlasting the bodies and moments they depict. In this space, time does not disappear but lingers, glowing softly like a scene that continues long after the screen fades to black.
Image:
Youssef Nabil, The Wedding, New York, 2025. Courtesy of the artist and Mariane Ibrahim. © Youssef Nabil