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El Fenn

Derb Moullay Abdullah Ben Hussain,
Bab El Ksour,
Medina,
Marrakech

+212 524 44 1220
[email protected]

MUST SEE ART EXHIBITIONS – SPRING 2026

Many of the exhibitions launched to coincide with the 1-54 Contemporary African Art Fair are still on view in Marrakech. Here’s our rundown of the must-sees this Spring 2026.

 

Red Burn by Salma Chaddadi, MCC Gallery, until March 30 

Born in Casablanca and trained in Paris, Chaddadi’s work has been shown at the Centre Pompidou and Museum of Modern Art in Paris. In her new series of stunning portraits, Cheddadi examines masculinity in a vulnerable and tender way. Her canvases might be large but they also convey an immediate sense of intimacy. And in rejecting ideas around traditional masculinity, Chaddadi imbues her work with sensuality and softness. The results are captivating. 

 

In Between Blues, curated by Roger Karera, DaDa, until March 30 

Move between floors of this former bus station turned gallery and eating space to discover work by a collection of 20 artists from Africa and its diaspora. Together, they explore the history and symbolism of the colour blue, the interplay between earth, sky and water, as well as memory, matter and movement. This richly layered exhibition features everything from sculpture and installation to photography, painting and textile.

 

The Inner Garden by Rita Alaoui, El Fenn, until June 30 

Born in Rabat and raised in Casablanca, Alaoui moved to Paris and then New York to study at the Parsons School of Design. The Inner Garden interweaves terrestrial and aquatic gardens in a series of stunning paintings featuring plants and flora. To backdrop the exhibition, Alaoui has covered the walls of El Fenn’s entrance corridors with large-scale murals, the spaces connected by our palm-filled central courtyard. The result is an immersive experience as the viewer moves between real and imagined gardens.

 

Holding Space by Rachid Bouhamidi, Galerie Siniya28, until March 8 

Born in the US to a Moroccan father and French mother, Bouhamidi grew up visiting and working at the family restaurant Dar Maghreb in Los Angeles. This version of Morocco, recreated on Sunset Boulevard in Hollywood, was all Bouhamidi knew of Morocco until his first visit aged 19. In Holding Space, he creates a dreamlike landscape where different geographies overlap, narratives of cultural memory and familial heritage are explored. Jeff Koehler, celebrated author of Matisse in Morocco, saw his work and felt ‘overwhelmed by the energy and exuberance’.       

 

Sarabande by Yasmina Alaoui, Comptoir des Mines, until 28 March

Yasmina Alaoui is a French-Moroccan multidisciplinary artist who was born in New York in 1977 and now splits her time between New York and Marrakech. Working across a range of media, including sculpture, painting, drawing, design, filmmaking and music composition, her new exhibition builds on previous work which questioned representations of femininity in Morocco. In Sarabande, Alaoui’s paintings are filled with nebulous figures as she subverts the traditional trope of the direct gaze to show the female body as an active presence that resists objectification.

 

Shifting Lights Yasmine Hatimi and Meriem Nour, Hanout Boutique, until March 31

Designer Meriem Nour has made her name with fashion that’s hand-worked and created bespoke at her medina atelier. For 154, she collaborated with visual artist Yasmine Hatimi on a three-part installation that combines video, photography and fashion to examine how the female body is constructed, coded and perceived within contemporary Arab societies. The photographic element for instance explores the female body through framing and posture, while the fashion presents garments as sculpture. Thought-provoking and filled with interesting questions.

Le Chant des Couleurs, Galerie Tindouf, until February 26

Many artists are drawn to Morocco because of the purity of its light – and the way this affects colour. This collective exhibition showcases work by some of Moroccan art’s most celebrated names, including Mohammed Melehi and Tahar Ben Jelloun, as well as younger artists such as Abdelmalik Berhiss, who together explore colour as a language, as well as its forms, symbols and pigments. Through their work, the artists explore their interior worlds and the results are colour-soaked and beautiful.

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