Em Sherif Art Foundation reimagines global restaurants as cultural hubs

Em Sherif Art Foundation reimagines global restaurants as cultural hubs
Em Sherif CEO and co-founder of the art foundation Dani Chakour. (Supplied)
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Updated 29 June 2025

Em Sherif Art Foundation reimagines global restaurants as cultural hubs

Em Sherif Art Foundation reimagines global restaurants as cultural hubs

DUBAI: With 24 outposts around the world, the minds behind Lebanese restaurant Em Sherif are keenly aware of their responsibility when it comes to sharing the country’s culinary culture with international audiences.

Now, they are taking things one step further with the launch of the Em Sherif Art Foundation that aims to provide increased visibility for artists through restaurants — in Doha, Monaco, London, Paris and Dubai, among other cities — which are being reimagined as cultural hubs.

Earlier this year, the Em Sherif Cafe in Paris showcased the work of Lebanese photographer Ziad Antar, and part of the initiative sees diners at all Em Sherif locations presented with three menus — a food menu, a drinks menu and an art menu — inviting guests to engage with the evolving story of contemporary Lebanese art.




'Kiev' (2024) by Ziad Antar at Em Sherif Cafe in Paris. (Supplied)

Em Sherif CEO and co-founder of the art foundation, Dani Chakour, spoke to Arab News about the cultural initiative.

“The art menu is not intended for commercial or financial purposes. Rather, it serves as a curated catalogue that showcases the artworks currently on display,” he said.

The decision to focus exclusively on Lebanese artists was intentional, Chakour added.




'Potato Portraits' (2025) by Ziad Antar at Em Sherif Cafe in  Paris. (Supplied)

“In Lebanon, it is often the private sector that drives meaningful cultural and artistic initiatives, as government support for the arts remains limited. Through this foundation, we aim to be an added value for our artists, helping them gain the visibility and recognition they deserve on a global scale.

“We need active public-sector involvement: We need more art fairs, modern infrastructure, supportive tariffs and dedicated museums. Without this foundational support, our artists will continue to be overlooked, despite their remarkable talent,” he said.

Chakour, who has a personal collection of more than 600 artworks, spotlighted celebrated names in the international art industry who he says benefited from working abroad.

“Huguette Caland, Gibran Khalil Gibran, Etel Adnan, Mona Hatoum, Walid Raad, Yvette Ashkar, Amin Maalouf, they are some of Lebanon’s most celebrated names. But what do they all have in common? They each spent the majority of their careers abroad, in environments that offered the right ecosystems … this is not a reflection of a lack of talent in Lebanon. On the contrary, it’s a reflection of what’s missing structurally; the institutional support, the infrastructure, the public funding, the museums, the cultural policies and the global exposure.

“At Em Sherif Art Foundation, we’re driven by a mission to help bridge that gap — to create opportunities within and beyond Lebanon so that our artists don’t need to leave home in order to rise,” Chakour said, noting that showcases by artists Christine Safa, Willy Aractengi, Ayman Baalbaki, Hussein Madi and Bibi Zogbe will be hosted in the coming months.


Rama Duwaji, wife of New York’s mayor-elect, wears Palestinian designer on stage

Rama Duwaji, wife of New York’s mayor-elect, wears Palestinian designer on stage
Updated 2 min 13 sec ago

Rama Duwaji, wife of New York’s mayor-elect, wears Palestinian designer on stage

Rama Duwaji, wife of New York’s mayor-elect, wears Palestinian designer on stage
  • US-Syria artist wears Palestine-Jordan designer Zeid Hijazi
  • Appears on stage alongside her husband Zohran Mamdani

DUBAI: Zohran Mamdani, the 34-year-old democratic socialist, won the New York City mayoral race on Tuesday, with support pouring in on social media from around the world.

After the win was announced, Mamdani, who has campaigned for Gaza’s people, gave a rousing speech decrying far-right politics and was joined on stage by his wife, US-Syrian artist Rama Duwaji.

For the occasion, Duwaji wore a “Frequency” top by London-based Palestinian-Jordanian designer Zeid Hijazi. According to the label’s website, the designer draws inspiration from “Palestinian folklore, rebellion, and Arab futurism.”

Duwaji’s work has been featured by outlets including The New Yorker, The Washington Post, BBC, Apple, Spotify, VICE, and the Tate Modern in London.

Now based in Brooklyn, Duwaji creates digital art focusing on her political and feminist themes.

Duwaji has criticized the arrest of Mahmoud Khalil, the Columbia University protester detained by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers on March 8.

She has also spoken out against police violence toward pro-Palestinian demonstrators and spotlighted human interest stories, including intimate portraits of bakers in Gaza.

The pair met on a dating app in New York City and married in December 2024, according to reports.