Biography — Dr. Dena Al-Adeeb

Where scholarship and art
refuse to stay separate.

Dena Al-Adeeb is an Iraqi-born transnational artist, scholar, educator, cultural worker, and mother. Born in Baghdad and raised in Iraq and Kuwait, she was displaced by war twice in childhood — fleeing Baghdad before the Iran–Iraq War, and again during the 1991 Gulf War, before relocating to the United States. Those lived experiences of refuge, immigration, and survival inform both her scholarship and an interdisciplinary art practice spanning performance, video, installation, digital art, photography, sculpture, sound, and text.

Artist · Scholar · Cultural Worker

Lives and works in the San Francisco Bay Area

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Statement — 01

Dena Al-Adeeb works in the space where scholarship and art refuse to stay separate. An Iraqi-born transnational artist, scholar, educator, cultural worker, and mother, she was raised in Iraq and Kuwait and displaced twice by war — fleeing Baghdad before the Iran–Iraq War, and again during the 1991 Gulf War. These lived experiences of refuge, immigration, and survival as a woman of color are not background to her work; they are its analytic and aesthetic core.

Her transdisciplinary research sits at the intersection of U.S. imperial war geographies, militarism, and extractive capitalist economies in West Asia, foregrounding the visual, material, and petro-culture of the Arab and Muslim worlds. In her book-in-progress, The Architecture of War: The Destructions of Iraq and the Rise of Petro-cultural Imaginaries in the Persian Gulf Region — growing out of her doctoral work at NYU under Ella Shohat — she traces the relationship between architecture, archaeology, art, and the politics of militarized visual culture across neo-colonial and imperial processes in the Middle East.

That same inquiry animates her art. Across performance, video, installation, digital art, photography, sculpture, sound, and text, she makes performative, relational, participatory works that map collective memory, refugee narratives, and war-torn architecture and geographies. In An Archive of Future Memories: A Letter to my Daughter, she writes to her daughter to trace a trilogy of displacements against the ongoing effects of U.S. militarization in Iraq. In Crossings / عبور, made with sound artist Sholeh Asgary, she reaches back to the Epic of Gilgamesh to excavate the relationship between racialized necropolitical destruction and bodies in protest across time and space.

As a fellow at the Käte Hamburger Centre for Apocalyptic and Post-Apocalyptic Studies, she insisted that catastrophe is not a theoretical horizon but a present, material condition: “Apocalypses are not in the future. Apocalypses are happening now.” Whether writing a chapter on petro-cultural imaginaries or staging an electro-acoustic expanded-cinema performance, Al-Adeeb pursues one decolonial project — making the geographies of war and oil legible, and making the arts, humanities, and social sciences meaningful to communities far beyond the academy.

In her words

I investigate the relationship between architecture, archaeology, art, and the politics of militarized visual culture, as they relate to violent neo-colonial and imperial processes in the Middle East.

UC President’s Postdoctoral Fellowship — research statement

Curriculum Vitae

Research

14
  • U.S. imperial war geographies
  • Militarism & militarization
  • Petroculture & oil economies
  • Extractive economies in West Asia
  • Visual & material culture of the Arab/Muslim worlds
  • Collective memory & refugee narratives
  • War-torn architecture & geographies
  • Militarized visual culture
  • SWANA futurism aesthetics
  • Comparative futurisms & techno-orientalism
  • Apocalyptic & post-apocalyptic studies
  • Transnational feminist refugee studies
  • Diasporic temporality & futurity
  • Decolonial frameworks

Education

03
  1. 01 Ph.D. 2018
  2. 02 M.A. 2008
  3. 03 B.A. 1998

Fellowships & Residencies

10
  1. 01 Mellon Artist & Practitioner Fellow 2021
  2. 02 President’s Postdoctoral Fellow, American Studies 2018–2021
  3. 03 Senior Fellow (inaugural class)
  4. 04 Resident Fellow
  5. 05 Artist in Residence 2023–2024
  6. 06 Artist Residency (D.E.A.R.) 2023
  7. 07 Artist in Residence 2024
  8. 08 Artist in Residence 2019–2021
  9. 09 Artist Residency
  10. 10 Artist Residency

Selected Exhibitions & Screenings

21
  1. 01 In Search of Remnant Images 2026
  2. 02 Arab American National Museum
  3. 03 National Veterans Art Museum
  4. 04 Mana Contemporary
  5. 05 Light Work Gallery
  6. 06 Museum of Latin American Art
  7. 07 Headlands Center for the Arts
  8. 08 Worth Ryder Gallery, UC Berkeley
  9. 09 In the Absence of Memories… there are fragments 2022
  10. 10 The Letters of Mina Harker 2023
  11. 11 S3ljam 2023
  12. 12 We Love Life (Whenever We Can) 2023
  13. 13 Art 13 London — Modern & Contemporary Art Fair
  14. 14 Bastakiya Art Fair
  15. 15 Museum of Tunisia
  16. 16 Galerie le Violon Bleu
  17. 17 Örebro International Videoart Festival
  18. 18 Falaki Gallery
  19. 19 Mashrabia Gallery
  20. 20 Darb 1718
  21. 21 Espace Karim Francis Gallery

Writing & Scholarship

Essays, chapters, and conversations in Amerasia Journal, the Journal of Middle East Women’s Studies, Syracuse and Duke University Press volumes, and a book in progress, The Architecture of War.

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Selected Talks & Performances

07
  1. 01 An Archive of Future Memories: Letters to My Daughter — lecture-performance 2025
  2. 02 على حافة البحر / At the Edge of the Sea — screening 2025
  3. 03 An Archive of Future Memories: A Letter to My Daughter — talk 2021
  4. 04 Apocalyptic Sensibilities and Post-Apocalyptic Futurism 2021
  5. 05 Love Letter to Palestine — pedagogical workshop 2021
  6. 06 Bridging SWANA Art Communities in the Bay Area 2021
  7. 07 SWANA Futurisms — Pedagogy Reading Group 2020

Teaching & Affiliations

  1. 01 Curator — DIWAN: SWANA Futurisms
  2. 02 Member — Palestinian Feminist Collective
  3. 03 Member — HEKLER Collective

Has taught at

  • New York University
  • Pratt Institute
  • San Francisco State University
  • Expression College for Digital Arts

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