<span>W</span><span>earing a wig held back by a broken pair of sunglasses</span><span> and a necklace lined with tubes of lotion, a mannequin gawks down at visitors to</span><span> Warehouse421. Its face has been hollowed</span><span> out to make room for a large, bulbous Edison-style light bulb. Its body is covered with small circles of red and blue paint. A pom-pom is fastened as a tail,</span><span> the silver strips of plastic fluttering in</span><span> the air blowing from a fan that is fixed at its thigh.</span> <span>It is a strange, otherworldly sculpture, and like the rest of Hashel Al Lamki</span><span>'s works at the gallery, it doesn't immediately make sense. The mannequin beside it wears</span><span> a dress made </span><span>of empty pill packaging. It seems Al Lamki is trying to draw a metaphor </span><span>about society's dependency on pharmaceuticals.</span> <span>He</span><span> gives objects such as empty Vimto bottles</span><span> and medication boxes </span><span>another meaning.</span> <span>The key to understanding his work may be in the title of Al Lamki</span><span>'s first major solo exhibition, </span><span>The Cup and The Saucer, which </span><span>opened </span><span>this week</span><span><strong>. </strong></span><span>The show's curator, Munira Al Sayegh, says the crockery</span><span> is a metaphor for two objects that are created for one another, and which only exist </span><span>separately</span><span> when they are pulled away from each other by another factor.</span> <span>You might</span><span> think </span><span>"this is as </span><span>self-indulgent as art can get</span><span>", </span><span>as though</span><span> someone had made a bulk of work and </span><span>scrambled to find a justification for it, l</span>oosely tying them <span>together under </span><span>the vague umbrella of a metaphor. But</span><span> there's more to it</span><span>. </span> <span>The show, which is divided into nine parts</span><span>, </span><span>explores diverse themes including</span><span> </span><span>"birth and death</span><span>" and</span><span> </span><span>"rejection and reflection</span><span>".</span><span> </span><span>It is the culmination of a two-year collaboration between Al Sayegh and Al Lamki</span><span>, </span><span>one of the founders of </span><span>Bait 15, a</span><span> studio and gallery</span><span> in Abu Dhabi.</span> <span>The first artwork on view</span><span> at the exhibition is an explosion of gaudy ties billowing from underneath a block of concrete, on top of which a long, wilting stem of poker chips forms. </span><span>It looks like a house plant made of rubbish</span><span>. The approach is echoed in another piece further on, in an artwork of stacked pistachios balanced on top of an old pearlescent vase.</span> <span>As a viewer, you </span><span>don't know whether</span><span> you are being mocked or made privy to a joke.</span> <span>Al Lamki </span><span>is doing his part to usurp the place of craft in art, giving precedent and priority to his concepts instead. The idea, he says, is to remove any hindrance</span><span> from the flow of ideas. </span> <span>"Munira </span><span>and I would brainstorm during our ritualistic Monday meetings. We kept a fact sheet and would jot down information on whatever was inspiring us that day, f</span><span>rom facts about Jebel</span><span> Hafeet to penguins and bananas," he</span><span> says.</span> <span>Al Lamki</span><span> goes to Abu Dhabi</span><span> looking for material to work with, from malls and souqs to old buildings around the city's</span><span> Tourist Club a</span><span>rea that are scheduled for demolition. He salvages</span><span> old </span><span>vases, discarded</span><span> clothes and other material destined for the junkyard and gives them second life.</span> <span>"It's not dumpster diving," he says. "It's just going about and finding material to work with, p</span><span>articularly those no longer in use by the standards we live by. That's always been my process. I don't stick to a single medium, doing everything from sculpture </span><span>to video. With this exhibition, I found I had more freedom. To work with the same approach, but on a much larger scale."</span> <span>This scale, however, may be detrimental to the </span><span>wider scope of the exhibition's statement. Some the works seem to lack focus</span><span> and, while interesting to look at, do not add to the overarching artistic narrative.</span> <span>But then comes a room housing</span><span> a collection of 50</span><span> paintings, huddled frame to frame. The space probably holds the best work of the show, and</span><span> </span><span>includes paintings of a golf course, a petrol</span><span> station, the interior of </span><span>Louvre Abu Dhabi, the fruit section </span><span>of a supermarket and the night view from the top of Jebel Hafeet. The paintings have been executed with</span><span> an idiosyncratic finesse. The vibrancy of their colours </span><span>is arresting. The landscapes and subjects </span><span>are familiar to a UAE resident, but Al Lamki</span><span>'s choice of what to leave out of focus and what to detail </span><span>makes you see them again, in </span><span>a new</span><span> light.</span> <span>One of the most impressive pieces is a </span><span>mural depicting</span><span> a desert landscape on the left and a golf course on the right. A polar bear with a </span><span>muzzle tears a piece of meat from the carcass of its kill. In the background is a hazy view of a waddle of penguins. The painting is surreal</span><span>. But just when you thought you </span><span>understood what the exhibition is about, this picture</span><span> </span><span>throws your assumptions into the wind. Whether this is a good or bad thing is for</span><span> you to decide.</span> <span>In one piece, </span><span>called </span><span><em>S</em></span><span><em>creen</em></span><span><em> </em></span><span><em>Savers</em></span><span>, </span><span>a video installation shows fractal patterns and a woman with balloons and a </span><span>blank expression. The video is subtitled with</span><span> facts about Al Ain, </span><span>where Al Lamki</span><span> is from</span><span>, and Jebel</span><span> Hafeet. They detail </span><span>that Jebel Hafeet is steeper on its</span><span> east side, that the area was separated from Africa about</span><span> 25 million years ago and that it moves north about five centimetre</span><span>s every year.</span> <span>They are facts you'd expect to find </span><span>on </span><span>Wikipedia</span><span>, yet there they are, appearing on the screen like lyric cues in a karaoke video</span><span>. </span><span>That being said, The Cup and </span><span>The Saucer is a journey into a resourceful artistic practice and an invitation into Al Lamki</span><span>'s imagination. The more patient observers </span><span>are likely to find lots to glean from </span><span>his pieces</span><span>.</span><span> If anything, the artist takes you on a journey that makes you</span><span> question everything you see.</span> <em><span>The Cup and The Saucer is</span><span> at Warehouse421, Mina Zayed, Abu Dhabi, until Sunday, May 17</span></em>