The Hangar Exhibition
Reem Abu Sitteh - RASIF Designs
Reem Abu Sitteh Interior & Furniture (RASIF) Designs create art pieces and furniture items for luxury home decor.
Her designs are a combination of modern and traditional designs, where Arabic traditional techniques are given a modern, contemporary twist based on geometrical lines.
Abu Sitteh takes on simplicity in design, with light colors that generate the beauty in raw materials, resulting in a meditative and relaxing reflection to the eye. For the exhibition, she is showing a sofa unit and a lantern unit.
Jafar Dajani - Jafar Dajani Interior Architecture and Furniture Design
Jafar Dajani, Jordanian born interior architect, studied architecture in the UK, and completed a Master’s degree in Interior Design, specializing in boutique hotels. Since starting his own design practice in 2013, Jafar Dajani Interior Architecture and Furniture Design, he has completed several upscale residential projects in Dubai.
For ADW, Dajani is presenting a table that relates to his memories of growing up in the city of Amman, namely the 8 circles of West Amman. The ‘Jabal Amman’ table consists of cylinders, stacked on top of the other. Each cylinder is made of a different material that corresponds to the colors and textures you experience throughout your journey on this route.
Dajani was listed as one of the top 50 Architects and Interior Designers for 2016 by Architectural Digest Middle East.
Katia Al Tal - Nuwa Creations
Renowned sculptor, Katia Al Tal, takes the energy of the Earth at its most fundamental clay level, infuses it with passion, molds it with vision, and transforms it into magnificence.
To fulfill her goal in functional art, Al Tal established a workshop in Amman, where her brand was conceived in functional art; Nuwa Creations has been celebrated at numerous ateliers, exhibitions, museums, private art collections and media channels in five continents.
Al-Tal’s lighting unit, INDIGO, is an assemblage of rotating ceramic layers finely cut to form an organic shape with illumination on top. The skeleton inside is the base that facilitates the rotation of each layer, transforming the piece into a new shape each time it’s moved.