Veronika Berezina: Building bridges through art in Dubai and Paris

Veronika Berezina: Building bridges through art in Dubai and Paris
onika Berezina, who was born in St. Petersburg and trained as a lawyer, spent more than a decade balancing her legal career with a growing passion for contemporary art. (Supplied)
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Updated 20 August 2025

Veronika Berezina: Building bridges through art in Dubai and Paris

Veronika Berezina: Building bridges through art in Dubai and Paris

JEDDAH: Veronika Berezina, who was born in St. Petersburg and trained as a lawyer, spent more than a decade balancing her legal career with a growing passion for contemporary art.

“I realised contemporary art offered something my legal career could not — a space for engaging with the pressing questions of our time in creative and philosophical ways,” she told Arab News. What began as private collecting soon became a public mission.

In March 2023, she opened NIKA Project Space in Dubai, “a space where audiences, artists, and curators could meet, exchange, and challenge each other openly.”

A second location followed in Paris’s Komunuma art district in September 2024, creating what Berezina calls “a bridge between European and Global South perspectives.”

NIKA champions artists and curators from underrepresented geographies, with a focus on experimental and research-driven practice. Its residencies, publishing projects, and exhibitions are intertwined.

“Residencies allow artists to immerse themselves in a place, research deepens the conceptual framework, and publishing ensures the ideas travel further,” Berezina said. This summer’s Open Studios in Dubai, featuring Yasmine Al-Awa, Ahed Al-Kathiri, and Zahra Jewanjee, led to “Rooted Echoes,” an exhibition exploring memory, cultural inheritance, and ecology.

Her curatorial ethos is shaped by her cross-cultural life. “Growing up in St. Petersburg gave me an early appreciation for the arts, while working internationally taught me adaptability and empathy.”

She prioritises artists from the Global South and female voices, aiming to “address a long-standing imbalance in the global art narrative.”

For Berezina, success is not simply about sales. “If an exhibition shifts perceptions, sparks conversation, or helps an artist reach a new stage in their career, that is success.”

She balances commercial viability with conceptual integrity by cultivating a collector base “who value intellectual depth as much as aesthetics.”

Running two spaces across different cultural contexts brings challenges, especially as a woman leader.

“Gender should never determine vision or talent, yet opportunities have not always been equally accessible,” she said. “These challenges have reinforced my conviction to create spaces that amplify underrepresented voices.”

Her advice to women entering the art world is straightforward: “Be clear in your vision, learn every facet of the business, and build a network of allies. Authenticity is your greatest asset.”

Berezina’s journey, from the law offices of St. Petersburg to the art hubs of Dubai and Paris, is anchored by one belief: art is not just to be seen, but to be lived, discussed, and used to connect worlds.


Egypt campaigners demand artefact returns after Dutch govt agrees to send back 3,500-year-old stone head

Egypt campaigners demand artefact returns after Dutch govt agrees to send back 3,500-year-old stone head
Updated 35 sec ago

Egypt campaigners demand artefact returns after Dutch govt agrees to send back 3,500-year-old stone head

Egypt campaigners demand artefact returns after Dutch govt agrees to send back 3,500-year-old stone head
  • Move comes as Grand Egyptian Museum in Cairo opens to the public
  • Zahi Hawass, Egyptologist and former minister of antiquities, starts petition to return Rosetta Stone, plus items from Paris and Berlin

LONDON: Campaigners in Egypt have demanded the return of artefacts held in Europe after the opening of the Grand Egyptian Museum in Cairo.

It comes as Dick Schoof, the outgoing prime minister of the Netherlands, announced that a 3,500-year-old stone head from the dynasty of Thutmose III would be returned to Egypt during a summit with President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi in Cairo on Sunday.

The handover, to take place later this year under the 1970 UNESCO Convention, comes after the item was seized in Maastricht at an art fair in 2022.

Items including the Rosetta Stone at the British Museum in London are among the most important in both Egyptian and world ancient history, and Zahi Hawass, Egyptologist and former minister of antiquities, launched a movement to pressure international governments into returning them in 2010.

As well as the Rosetta Stone, Hawass’ campaign also seeks the repatriation of a bust of Nefertiti from the Neues Museum in Berlin, and the Dendera Zodiac in the Louvre.

It was derailed by political upheaval caused by the Arab Spring in 2011, but Hawass now believed the tide is turning.

“In the past, they said your museums weren’t qualified,” Hawass told The Times. “Now we’ve built more than 22 museums to the highest standards — some more modern than those in America or Europe.”

Egypt banned the export of all historic items in 1983, but illegal digging and black market sales remain widespread and lucrative.

“They dig destructively, interested only in what they can carry,” said Monica Hanna, dean of Egypt’s Arab Academy for Science and Technology. 

Hanna, who founded the Repatriate Rashid campaign to return the 18 artefacts taken in the Rosetta Stone export in 1801, said the decision of the Dutch government may “encourage those who want to do the right thing to do it.”

She added that Western museums could no longer guarantee the security of items, saying: “What about the recent theft from the Louvre, the 2,000 items stolen from the British Museum last year, or environmental activists pouring oil on Egyptian artefacts in Germany?”

Hanna added: “We don’t want every Egyptian artefact abroad. We want those essential to Egypt’s narrative.”

Hawass now plans to submit an official document petitioning for the return of artefacts after receiving 1 million signatures, with campaigners across Egypt’s major museums to ask visitors to sign up.

“This concerns the international community — the Egyptian people I represent, supported by the government and the president himself,” Hawass said.

Egypt has gone to great lengths to track down stolen items in the past few years, securing the return of over 5,000 since 2020, including 114 from the US and 91 from France. In 2019, a gilded coffin of Nedjemankh was returned after an investigation found export licenses were forged during its sale to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York for $4 million in 2011. 

The Rosetta Stone, taken by British forces to London in 1802 after its discovery by French soldiers in 1799, dates from 196 B.C. and features ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs, as well as Demotic and Greek script. It was key to deciphering the ancient Egyptian language after it was translated by Jean-Francois Champollion in 1822.