KHIVA.- After a five-year hiatus, the Asia Contemporary Art Forums (ACAF) FIELD MEETING series returns with its latest and most transformative chapter: FIELD MEETING Take 7: Thinking Pilgrimage. This edition convenes 20 artists, curators, and spiritual practitioners for a contemplative caravan-style journey across Uzbekistans sacred cities and landscapesKhiva, Samarkand, Bukhara, and Tashkentanchored by meditations, performative dialogues, site-specific responses, and healing rituals.
As they traverse architectural marvels and elemental landscapes long revered by seekers, the journey invites deep reflection and communal exchange, enacting the field not only as a geographical site but as a shared state of consciousnessa space to cultivate new ways of knowing, where pilgrimage itself becomes a curatorial method: a liminal terrain in which knowledge is both shared and embodied through co-creation. In this context, art-making and curating are journeys of ideastransformative acts that integrate tradition and innovation, dissolve ego, and awaken the spirit.
At the heart of this project is ACAF Director, curator Leeza Ahmadys concept of Sufi Fluxus, a continuum of spiritual play, critical humor, and creative experimentation rooted in centuries-old Sufi traditions and ancestral knowledge. These practicespoetry, music, ritual, and pilgrimageanticipated many concerns later explored by Fluxus artists of the 1970s: dissolving boundaries between art and life, challenging hierarchies, and prioritizing experience over objects. The Sufi figure Mullah Nasrudin, both trickster and sage, embodies this spirit. His stories model transformation that moves fluidly between the rational and the irrational, the personal and the collective, where humor, mischief, paradox, revelation, absurdity, and insight flow as one.
Thinking Pilgrimage approaches contemporary art through living currents of spiritual wisdommyth and oral tradition, faith and remembrancerooted in the regions legacy as a center of the Islamic Renaissance, yet continually opening outward into dialogue with other mystical and esoteric streams: Buddhist and Hindu, Zoroastrian and Abrahamic, Taoist and Zen, shamanic and beyond.
Guided by these currents of resonance, the presence of invited Afghan and Afghan-descended artistsMoshtari Hilal, Zolayzha Sherzad, Roya Ghiasy, Yusef Misdaq, Parwana Haydar, and Khadim Aliadds vital contemporary voices, embodying resilience, vision, and deep cultural rootedness. For them, this program is both a creative act and a gesture of visibility within a cultural landscape shaped by layered histories and shifting geopolitical currents. They walk alongside voices from South, West, and East Asiaartists Shezad Dawood, Amina Ahmed, Farah Salem, Deniz Gül, Sam Samiee, and Chunhui Kang, together with curators Megha Ralapati and Lila Nazemianwhose practices open portals onto spiritual, historical, and ecological inquiries deeply attuned to the pilgrimages ethos. For participant profiles, click here.
A highlight is the inaugural Bukhara Biennale, approached not as spectators but as participants attuning to how selected worksespecially by regional artistsresonate with the sacred rhythms of place, a living enactment of Sufi Fluxus. Encounters with sacred mountains, desert expanses, and bodies of water further embody the flux between stillness and movement, solitude and gathering.
Since its inception in 2014, formerly as the signature program of Asia Contemporary Art Week (ACAW), FIELD MEETING has redefined curation as a performative site for generative thought. Under Leeza Ahmadys leadership since 2005, ACAF has evolved toward embodying the intimate relationship between contemporary art, curatorial practice, and spiritual life. Thinking Pilgrimage deepens that mission, grounding creative inquiry in the playful yet profound currents of Sufi Fluxuscultivating awareness, connection, and collective care for the world we share.
Asia Contemporary Art Forum (ACAF), a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, grew out of Asia Contemporary Art Week (ACAW), founded in 2001 by a consortium of museum directors, curators, and collectors to educate and engages the publicparticularly in the United Stateson the diversity and vitality of contemporary art and culture from Asia. Since 2021, ACAF has focused on Talking Peers, an internal facing program fostering mentorship and collaboration among Asia-based and diaspora artists, including Talking Peers: Arts for Afghanistan, supporting resettled Afghan artists through bilingual sessions with leading artists, curators, and academics.
A full archive of ACAWs past editions is now available at acaw.info. Past FIELD MEETING editionsfeaturing artists performances and lecture-performances hosted at institutions such as The Met, Asia Society, the Guggenheim Museum, and Alserkal Avenuecan be explored at acaforum.art.