Grants and residencies Research and art Mythological Migrations: Imagining Queer Muslim Utopias Through Contemporary Art Main applicant Doctoral Candidate Qureshi Muhammad Abdullah Amount of funding 116375 € Type of funding General grant call Fields Gender studies Grant year 2018 Jos omistat hankkeen, voit kirjautua sisään ja lisätä hankkeen tietoja. Log in Share: Back to Grants listing Responding to an urgent need to recognize queer Muslim voices and challenging rampant Islamophobia in Europe, my doctoral project contextualizes narratives of Muslim LGBTIQ+ refugees and asylum seekers in Finland in Islamic history, mythologies, and contemporary art. Taking the format of a multidisciplinary installation and a publication, the project is divided into three parts: Past, Present, and Future. ‘Past’ looks at the life and poetry of Rab’ia al Basri (713–801) and Madho Lal Hussain (1538–1599), both revered as Sufi Saints, and renowned for their radical views on love, desire, and equality. In ‘Present’, I build a case to learn from the work of the Pakistani contemporary artist, Anwar Saeed (b. 1955), who over three decades has been looking at ideas of queer desires within the South Asian Muslim context. And finally, in ‘Future’, I bring the various elements of the project together to showcase an imagined future queerness that counters existing representation of Islam and migrant bodies in Europe. Within Finland, the project further challenges normativity and notions of invisible witness by opening up a complex dialogue on migration, sexuality, and religion. Project report summary Mythological Migrations: Imagining Queer Muslim Utopias examines formations of queer identity and resistance in Muslim migratory contexts. Responding to an urgent need to recognize queer Muslim voices and address the rampant Islamophobia in Europe, the research contextualizes narratives of Muslim LGBTIQ+ immigrants in Islamic history, mythologies, and art. Through artistic and curatorial interventions, the project challenges and re-imagines spaces of exclusion and fetishization. The project is part of Abdullah Qureshi’s ongoing doctoral studies at Aalto University, Finland, and includes two artistic components, Chapter 1: The Nightclub (2019) and Chapter 2: The Darkroom (2020), and a monograph (forthcoming). Back to Grants listing