Waqt al-tagheer: time of change
Waqt al-tagheer: time of change  
ACE Open | March 3 - April 21
An eleven collective project featuring Abdul Abdullah, Nur Shkembi, Khaled Sabsabi, Eugenia Flynn, Abdullah MI Syed, Hoda Afshar, Khadim Ali, Shireen Taweel, Abdul-Rahman Abdullah, Zeina Iaali and Safdar Ahmed.
Milk of Millenia
For hundreds of thousands of years I have been dustgrains 
floating and flying in the will of the air, 
often forgetting ever being 
in that state, but in sleep 
I migrate back. I spring loose 
from the four-branched, time-and-space cross, 
this waiting room.
–Jaluldeen Rumi
Waqt al-tagheer: Time of change employs the meeting of time and space to explore 
the individual experiences of specific years or time frames - whether current, recent 
or historical - which have altered personal understandings of being. Each artist in 
this exhibition brings alternate histories that have defined or redefined them; be that 
through migration, exile, social and political upheaval or fundamental realisations that 
have characterised how they see themselves and perceive the world around them. 
Functioning in a broader Australian context that consistently seeks to politicise the 
artist’s identities, the exhibition provides a platform to collectively voice some of the 
complexities within the Muslim Australian experience.
Ideas of ‘national identity’ often confound alternative versions of history and are 
commonly defined and sustained through time in the way of the commemoration 
of specific events such as the First Fleet, 1788; Federation of Australia, 1901; the 
Gallipoli Landing, 1915, with the nation’s patriotic fervour further elicited in such 
events as the Australian Bicentenary, 1988; and Sydney Olympics, 2000. Waqt 
al-tagheer thereby parallels the notion of a sanctioned narrative, focusing on the 
personal consequences of particular events and time frames within Australia and 
around the world from an individual perspective, sometimes intertwining with such 
national or global events, but also include that of the deeply personal, the hidden 
or of the Divine. Within this engagement with time and space, we can witness the 
experiences of the human condition beyond the apparent to grapple with the poetic, 
disturbing, beautiful and fractured realities of one another.
Co-curated by Nur Shkembi & Abdul-Rahman Abdullah 
 
 













