The Henry opens two new exhibitions: Sophia Al-Maria: Not My Bag and A/political Rocks
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The Henry opens two new exhibitions: Sophia Al-Maria: Not My Bag and A/political Rocks
Timothy O’Sullivan (U.S., ca. 1840-1882). Cañon de Chelle, 1873. Albumen silver print. Joseph and Elaine Monsen Photography Collection, gift of Joseph and Elaine Monsen and The Boeing Company, 97.124.



SEATTLE, WA.- Sophia Al-Maria (b. 1983, Tacoma, Washington; lives in London) is a Qatari-American artist, writer, and filmmaker whose work interrogates the enduring orientalist gaze and residual histories of resource extraction and colonial authority in the context of contemporary culture and society. Not My Bag brings together Al-Maria’s recent trilogy of films and new collages that grapple with the violence of empire across individual and generational time scales, and animate the persistence of the rebellious, creative spirit amid the ruins of crisis. This is Al-Maria’s first exhibition in the Pacific Northwest, a region central to shaping the artist’s youth and the trajectory of her art practice.

Al-Maria’s film trilogy includes BEAST TYPE SONG (2019), TENDER POINT RUIN (2021), and TIGER STRIKE RED (2022), and features a recurring cast of friends and fellow artists who play both themselves and scripted characters. Al-Maria weaves together personal lore and geopolitical legend by using film genre ranging from science fiction and horror to adventure, as her material. Her resulting films are multi-layered and unspool the power dynamics of writing history with only unreliable narrators to tell it. These counter-narratives confront problems of erasure and misrepresentation and create portals to envision alternative futures.

The title, Not My Bag, is a dynamic expression of Al-Maria’s approach to history, writing, and language, evoking a colloquial phrase of disavowal, and simultaneously alluding to Ursula K. Le Guin’s essay “The Carrier Bag Theory of Fiction,” in which Le Guin advocates for writing narratives that hold the multiplicity of human experience. The metaphor of the bag recurs throughout Al-Maria’s work and points to her refusal of monolithic hero stories in favor of narratives that enfold the entangled relationship between pain and beauty and grapple with the complex, continual process of being and existing together on Earth.

During the first year of the COVID-19 lockdown, Al-Maria returned to her first loves of drawing and collage. What emerged were “paper videos,” which often complement the subject matter in her films and explore the ways cultural inheritance, fragmentation, and memory shape narrative and a sense of self. For this exhibition at the Henry, Al-Maria made a site-specific installation titled Al Atlal (2023), which collects together photography, excerpts from reference texts, film production ephemera, and other precious remains of the often-invisible work that goes into making the art itself. This spread of materials extends across the gallery walls, creating an impression but no clear outline of the creative process. These references include Arabic literature, American pop culture, and experimental punk cinema, alongside childhood drawings and photographs related to Al-Maria’s experience of growing up between Washington State and the Middle East. This nonlinear storyboard is composed of the remnants of Al-Maria’s life and work since leaving both her homes to immigrate to the United Kingdom. It maps her capacious view of the world forged across national borders, offering a way to reckon with the past and find pathways to survive in the present.




Sophia Al-Maria: Not My Bag is organized by Nina Bozicnik, Curator. Generous support is provided by the Seattle Office of Arts & Culture. Media sponsorship provided by KUOW.

A/political Rocks
JUL 22, 2023 – JAN 14, 2024


Drawn from the Henry collection, A/political Rocks explores the role landscape photography has played in shaping experience of the American West, paying particular attention to among the most superficially banal and apolitical of landscape subgenres: images of rocks. Through critical attention to the shifting circumstances in which these photographs were made, consideration of the changing contexts of their display, and attention to the writing of their history this exhibition invites viewers to reflect on the power and politics of landscape.

Spanning a roughly hundred-year period, the works in the exhibition range from documentary images produced as part of nineteenth-century geological surveys to modernist pictures made with artistic intent in the twentieth century. Taking several canonical American photographers as its focus, the exhibition includes work by Ansel Adams, Timothy O’Sullivan, Carleton Watkins, and Edward Weston, among others.

Surveying a range of photographic approaches to landscape, the exhibition will also consider the formation of modernist camera aesthetics, evolving American attitudes towards nature, questions of race and citizenship, and photography’s complex entanglements with industrial capitalism and settler colonialism in the United States.

A/political Rocks is organized by Adam Monohon, Curatorial Department Coordinator.










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