Steve Sabella
Steve Sabella | |
|---|---|
Photograph of Steve Sabella in a darkroom | |
| Born | 19 May 1975 Jerusalem |
| Alma mater | Jerusalem School of Photography (Musrara); State University of New York; University of Westminster; Sotheby’s Institute of Art |
| Known for | Photography; collage; visual arts; installation; writing; lecturing; postcolonial themes |
| Notable work | Settlement: Six Israelis & One Palestinian; 38 Days of Re-Collection; The Great March of Return; The Parachute Paradox; The Artist’s Curse |
| Awards | Ellen-Auerbach-Stipendium for Photography (Akademie der Künste, 2008); Nautilus Book Award (2016); Eric Hoffer Award (2017) |
| Website | stevesabella |
Steve Sabella (Arabic: ستيف سابيلا) (born 19 May 1975 in Jerusalem) is a Berlin-based artist who works primarily with photography, collage, and installation. He is the author of the memoir The Parachute Paradox: Decolonizing the Imagination[1] first published by Kerber Verlag in 2016.[2][3]
His work has been discussed in relation to the genealogy and archaeology of the image,[4] and to themes of identity and exile, including the “colonization of the imagination”.[5][6]
Sabella was among the artists commissioned for Mathaf: Arab Museum of Modern Art inaugural exhibition Told/Untold/Retold (2010–11).[7] Sabella has shown his work internationally at institutions and exhibitions including, the British Museum,[8] the 1st Biennial of Arab Photography (Maison Européenne de la Photographie and the Institut du Monde Arabe, Paris),[9] Les Rencontres d'Arles, Foto Fest Houston,[10] Arab World Institute, and the International Center for Photography Scavi Scaligeri (Verona), which presented a retrospective of his work in 2014.[11] In 2008, he received the Ellen-Auerbach-Fellowship for Photography from the Akademie der Künste (Berlin); recipients are selected by nomination and jury.[12][13] In 2014, Hatje Cantz and the Akademie der Künste (Berlin) published his monograph Steve Sabella – Photography 1997–2014, which includes texts by Hubertus von Amelunxen and Kamal Boullata.[14]
Early career and education
Sabella studied art photography at the Musrara School of Photography in Jerusalem, graduating in 1997. He later completed a BA in Visual Studies at the State University of New York, followed by an MA in Photographic Studies at the University of Westminster and an MA in Art Business at Sotheby’s Institute of Art.[15]
While based in Jerusalem, he worked as an artist and as a commissioned photographer for international organisations, including UNICEF,[16] UNRWA[17] and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP). In July 2005, UNDP officials identified Sabella and an Australian colleague as two contractors abducted in Gaza; both were released unharmed after about three hours.[18][19]
Sabella moved to London in 2007 and later relocated to Berlin, where he is based.[20]
Visual art
Sabella works with large-scale photography, photographic collage, and mixed media. Across these formats, he has described his visual works as a form of research into the genealogy of the image.[21] In his writing and interviews, he has contrasted his approach with documentary notions of photographic indexicality, arguing that photographic images can construct their own realities. He has also linked the production of such “alternative realities” to political questions, suggesting that images can shape the collective imagination, including in relation to Israel’s occupation of Palestine.[22] Writers on Sabella’s work have described it through the language of visual archaeology and palimpsest, linking his use of fragments and layered images to memory, displacement, and the formation of identity.[23][24][25]
Recurring themes in Sabella's work
Critical writing on Sabella’s practice has discussed the relationship between image and memory, and has often addressed themes of displacement, exile, and the politics of representation. Commentators have described works such as 38 Days of Re-Collection as layered constructions in which walls, fragments, and photographic imagery function as material traces of lived history.[26][27]
Visual archaeology
Throughout his practice, Sabella has produced works that examine how visual history is constructed and how images participate in that process. Writers have frequently discussed his method through the language of archaeology, treating images as sites to be excavated rather than transparent records.[28] In some works, Sabella builds images through processes of layering and revision; in others, photographs are presented as objects—for example, by printing black-and-white photo emulsion on Jerusalem stone or by transferring images onto fragments of scraped wall paint.[29] In the series 38 Days of Re-Collection, photographs are printed onto paint fragments scraped from walls in Jerusalem’s Old City; Ella Shohat describes the scraping as “an act of excavation of the buried substrata of forgotten lives,” and as a way to “visualise lives once again intermingled."[30] Independent curator Nat Muller described 38 Days of Re-Collection as making Sabella "a time capsule mediating the temporal limbo of the Palestinian condition."[31][32]
Exile, the Palestinian experience and the colonisation of the imagination
Critics of Sabella's work have often noted and discussed the themes of exile and the Palestinian experience. Artworks like Settlement - Six Israelis & One Palestinian and 38 Days of Re-Collection engage more directly with Sabella's birthplace in their content and media, but the themes of diaspora and occupation are also suggested by the titles of his series such as In Exile and Independence.[33]
Arts writer Myrna Ayad wrote that “it is his name which instantly displaces him,” and added that “whereas Sabella’s name may mislead, the titles of his artworks do not.” [34]
In a 2014 statement, Sabella argued that imagination is central to self-determination, describing a “colonisation of the imagination” as a condition that must be resisted at the level of the individual.[35][36]
In the artist’s monograph, Hubertus von Amelunxen wrote that Sabella “chose exile,” and that his work confronts exile “in its distorting and destructive consequences,” describing Sabella’s art as “an art of understanding… [that] forms a bridge — it is the bridge.”
Experimentation of the photographic medium
Since the beginning of his career, Sabella has experimented with the photographic medium across different formats and materials. His early series Search (1997) was shot on infrared film, while later works such as Kan Yama Kan (2005) and Settlement – Six Israelis & One Palestinian (2008–2010) reconfigure photographs within installation-based presentation. He has also produced works in which photographs are printed on nontraditional supports, including stone from Jerusalem and fragments of peeling wall paint. In the foreword to Steve Sabella: Photography 1997–2014, Kamal Boullata wrote that Sabella has been “using his camera as a painter uses his brush,” and concluded that the images are “a dream to discover.”[37]
Musicality
In Steve Sabella – Photography 1997–2014, art historian Hubertus von Amelunxen relates musical concepts to Sabella’s photo-collage practice, drawing in particular on the notion of counterpoint. Writing on Sinopia—a collage of photographs of the skyline of Manama, Bahrain—von Amelunxen describes the city’s mirrored axis and the skyline’s “reverberat[ion] at different pitches,” suggesting that visual repetition can produce a “sound pattern.”[38]
Sabella has also collaborated with musicians: in 2014, he commissioned the jazz ensemble The Khoury Project to interpret the visual form of Sinopia as a waveform and to create an electroacoustic composition that sampled audio recorded in Bahrain.[39]
Exhibitions
Solo exhibitions
Sabella exhibited his work at various venues in Palestine, including eleven solo exhibitions between 1998 and 2007.[40][41] Selected solo exhibitions outside Palestine include: Steve Sabella: In Exile (Metroquadro Gallery, Rivoli, 2010); Euphoria & Beyond (The Empty Quarter Gallery, Dubai, 2010), Archaeology of the Future (International Center for Photography Scavi Scaligeri, Verona, 2014); Fragments (Berloni Gallery, London, 2014); Layers (Contemporary Art Platform, Kuwait, 2014); Independence (Meem Gallery, Dubai, 2014);[42] Fragments From Our Beautiful Future (The Bumiller Collection, Berlin, 2017);[43] and TranscenDance (Der Divan, Berlin, 2024).[44]
Group exhibitions
Sabella has shown work in group exhibitions including Gates of the Mediterranean (Castello di Rivoli, Rivoli, 2008, curated by Martina Corgnati);[45] Told/Untold/Retold (Mathaf: Arab Museum of Modern Art, Doha, 2010–11, curated by Sam Bardaouil & Till Fellrath; commissioned artist for the museum’s inaugural exhibition);[46] Keep Your Eye on the Wall (Les Rencontres d’Arles, Arles, 2013, curated by MASASAM); View From Inside (FotoFest Biennial, Houston, 2014, curated by Karin Adrian von Roque);[47] First Biennial of Photographers of the Contemporary Arab World (Institute du Monde Arab and the Maison européenne de la photographie, Paris, 2015, curated by Gabriel Bauret);[48] Nel Mezzo del Mezzo (RISO Museo, Palermo, 2015, curated Christine Macel, Marco Bazzini, Bartomeu Mari);[49] Contemporary Art of the Middle East and North Africa (The British Museum, London, 2019, curated by Venetia Porter);[50] and Blocks (Museo Riso – Museo d’Arte Contemporanea della Sicilia, Palermo, 2021, curated by Daniela Brignone).[51][52]
Public collections and institutional commissions
Sabella’s work is held in a number of public and private institutional collections and has been presented through institutional commissions. In the United Kingdom, his work is included in the collection of the British Museum (London).[53] In France, works by Sabella are held by the Institut du Monde Arabe (Paris), including through the Lemand donation initiative.[54] In Qatar, he was among the artists commissioned for Told/Untold/Retold—part of Mathaf: Arab Museum of Modern Art’s inaugural programming, curated by Sam Bardaouil and Till Fellrath—and his work is also held in the Mathaf collection.[55][56] In Bahrain, he participated as one of the commissioned artists in Recreational Purpose at the Bahrain National Museum, which also holds his work.[57][56] In the United Arab Emirates, his work is held by the Barjeel Art Foundation (Sharjah)[58] and has been exhibited at the Salsali Private Museum (Dubai).[59][56] In Lebanon, his work is held by the Dalloul Art Foundation (Beirut).[60] Contemporary Art Platform (Kuwait) presented a solo presentation titled Evolution at Art Paris at the Grand Palais (Paris) in 2018[61] and also holds his work. In addition, Sabella contributed to the Ars Aevi Museum initiative through Neighbours in Dialogue: Istanbul Collection for Ars Aevi Sarajevo, associated with curator Beral Madra.[62][56]
Selected art publications
Steve Sabella - Photography 1997-2014
Steve Sabella – Photography 1997–2014 is Sabella's first monograph, published by Hatje Cantz in collaboration with the Akademie der Künste, Berlin (2014). The volume includes core texts by Hubertus von Amelunxen and a foreword by Kamal Boullata. Hatje Cantz describes the book as “read[ing] time and history out of the photographs,” framing the development of Sabella’s photographic oeuvre through exile, identity, migration, and the “divided topologies” of the 21st century.[63]
Archaeology of the Future
Archaeology of the Future is the catalogue published by Maretti Editore to accompany Sabella’s 2014 exhibition of the same name at the Centro Internazionale di Fotografia Scavi Scaligeri (Verona), curated by Karin Adrian von Roques and edited by Beatrice Benedetti. The publication frames Sabella’s practice around the relationship between image and imagination, and discusses recurring themes in the exhibition such as fragmentation, transience, and estrangement. In his contribution, Sabella describes the project as “an expedition through image and imagination,” proposing an “archaeology of the future” grounded in memory, perception, and layered visual palimpsests.[1]
Fragments From Our Beautiful Future
Fragments From Our Beautiful Future is a catalogue published by Kerber Verlag in 2017 accompanying the exhibition of the same name by Steve Sabella and Rebecca Raue at The Bumiller Collection, Berlin. The publication includes essays by Hubertus von Amelunxen, Ella Shohat, T.J. Demos, Elliot R. Wolfson, and A. S. Bruckstein Çoruh, among others.
In her contribution, Shohat reads Sabella’s 38 Days of Re-Collection through an “aesthetics of dis/placement,” describing the works’ scraped wall fragments and photographic overlays as a palimpsest of memory, domestic space, and historical rupture.[2] In a separate essay, Demos interprets the series as “archaeological traces” that materialize geopolitical dislocation, framing the work around a dialectic of loss and attempted repair.[3] Bruckstein Çoruh situates Sabella’s “archaeological” fragments within the exhibition’s broader dialogue between contemporary works and medieval objects, emphasizing a layered experience in which time becomes fluid and spatial.[4] Amelunxen characterizes Sabella’s images as ghostly—“the absence of presence and the presence of absence”—suspended between place and time.[5]
Palestine UNSETTLED
In 2022, Sabella published Palestine UNSETTLED, a photographic book supported by an AFAC grant and issued by Emaginity with support from the Dalloul Art Foundation. The publication presents 130 photographs made in Palestine during the Second Intifada and is designed without captions, dates, or any accompanying text except for an Arabic dedication reading “To Mohammad Al-Asaad and Children of the Dew,” referring to Al-Asaad’s iconic novel.[64]
De/Colonising Palestine: Contemporary Debates
Bocco, Riccardo; Saïd, Ibrahim (eds.). De/Colonising Palestine: Contemporary Debates. Geneva Graduate Institute, 2025. The cover image and other images in the volume are credited to Steve Sabella, and the book reproduces works from several of his series, including Elsewhere, 38 Days of Re-Collection, No Man’s Land, The Great March of Return, Everland, Exit, and SETTLEMENT | Six Israelis & One Palestinian. The volume also includes ‘The Parachute Paradox | Decolonizing the Imagination’ (chapter zero from Sabella’s memoir), which the introduction describes as delving into themes of identity, resilience, and imagination as tools of liberation.[65] Contributors include Francesca P. Albanese (with Lex Takkenberg) and Ilan Pappé, among others.[66][67] [6]
Further Reading
Sabella’s work has been reproduced and discussed in survey publications and edited volumes on contemporary Arab and Palestinian art, including the following:
Palestinian Art: From 1850 to the Present (Saqi Books, 2009)
- Boullata, Kamal. Palestinian Art: From 1850 to the Present. London: Saqi Books, 2009, pp. 301–303. [68]
New Vision (Thames & Hudson / 2009)
- Amirsadeghi, Hossein; Mikdadi, Salwa; Shabout, Nada M. (eds.). New Vision: Arab Contemporary Art in the 21st Century. London: Thames & Hudson, 2009. pp. 250 - 253. [69]
Keep Your Eyes on the Wall (Textuel, 2013)
- Snaije, Olivia; Albert, Mitchell. Keep Your Eyes on the Wall: Palestinian Landscapes. Paris, 2013. [70]
From Galilee to the Negev (Phaidon, 2014)
- Shore, Stephen. From Galilee to the Negev. London/New York: Phaidon Press, 2014. (Sabella essay: “Hostage”, pp. 104-106). [71]
View From Inside: Contemporary Arab Photography, Video and Mixed Media Art (Schilt Publishing / FotoFest, 2014)
- von Roques, Karin Adrian (lead curator). View From Inside: Contemporary Arab Photography, Video and Mixed Media Art. Amsterdam: Schilt Publishing / FotoFest, 2014.[72]
Nel Mezzo Del Mezzo
- Macel Christine, Bazzini Marco, Mari Bartomeu. Nel Mezzo Del Mezzo: Contemporary Art in the Mediterranean. Palermo, Museo Riso. pp 200 - 202. [73]
On the Arab-Jew, Palestine, and Other Displacements: Selected Writings (Pluto Press, 2017)
- Shohat, Ella. On the Arab-Jew, Palestine, and Other Displacements: Selected Writings. London: Pluto Press, 2017, cover art by Steve Sabella and essay in the inroudtcion. [74]
There Where You Are Not (Hirmer / 2019)
- Flood, Finbarr Barry (ed.). There Where You Are Not: Selected Writings of Kamal Boullata. Munich: Hirmer, 2019. pp. 138-144. [75]
Reflections: Contemporary Art of the Middle East and North Africa (British Museum Press, 2020)
- Porter, Venetia. Reflections: Contemporary Art of the Middle East and North Africa. London: British Museum Press, 2020, p. 164 [76]
Becoming Palestine: Toward an Archival Imagination of the Future (Duke University Press, 2021)
- Hochberg, Gil Z. Becoming Palestine: Toward an Archival Imagination of the Future. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2021, Cover art by Steve Sabella.[77]
Always Unconventional (Delius Klasing Verlag, 2023)
Always Unconventional. Leinfelden-Echterdingen: smart Europe GmbH, 2023. (Includes essay by Steve Sabella, “Art Is a Powerful Tool for Liberation”. [78][7]
Sumūd: A New Palestinian Reader (Seven Stories Press, 2024)
- Halasa, Malu; Elgrably, Jordan (eds.). Sumūd: A New Palestinian Reader. New York: Seven Stories Press, 2024, Cover art by Steve Sabella; pp. 149 -150). [79]
Narrative Threads (Saqi / 2025)
- Barakat, Joanna. Narrative Threads: Palestinian Embroidery in Contemporary Art. London: Saqi Books, 2025. pp. 152-161. [80]
Writing
Alongside his visual practice, Sabella has developed a writing practice spanning essays and books. His texts move between reflections on the mechanics of the art world and questions of exile, liberation and how images carry history. He published essays on the international art market and art-world dynamics in Contemporary Practices Art Journal, where he was a regular contributor from 2008 to 2012.[81]
The Parachute Paradox
Sabella’s memoir The Parachute Paradox: Decolonizing the Imagination was first published by Kerber Verlag in 2016. It recounts his upbringing in Jerusalem’s Old City under Israeli occupation and follows his later movement between places and cultures, framing exile as both a political condition and an inner one. Using the metaphor of a tandem jump with an Israeli, the book reflects on enforced entanglement—between lives, histories, and futures—and traces a search for liberation through questions of identity, displacement, and what Sabella calls the “colonization of the imagination.”[82]
In a review in Al-Araby Al-Jadeed, poet and critic Mohammed Al-Assad (محمد الأسعد) wrote that the book presents an unprecedented subject in Palestinian literature: تحرير الذات والوطن من خلال تحرير المخيّلة (“the liberation of the self and the homeland through the liberation of the imagination”).[83]
The Artist's Curse
On 21 September 2017, Sabella began publishing The Artist’s Curse as a daily online series of short texts (“curses”). The project was later expanded into the book The Artist’s Curse | On Being an Artist: Navigating the Art Market and the Art World (Emaginity Books, 2023), structured as 365 numbered reflections spanning themes from artistic purpose and the creative process to the practical realities of sustaining an art career. The double title is also read as The Artist’s Cure.[84] The publication was sponsored by the Dalloul Art Foundation.
In 2024, The Artist’s Curse received a Silver Nautilus Book Award in the Creativity & Innovation category.[85]
Always Unconventional
In 2023, Sabella contributed a commissioned essay on art as a tool for liberation to Smart Europe’s 25th-anniversary book Always Unconventional, which features contributors and personalities including Robbie Williams[86] and Ólafur Arnalds.[87]
Recognition
Sabella has received awards and scholarships including
- (2002) Young Artist of the Year Award, A. M. Qattan Foundation (Palestine).[88][89]
- (2007) Chevening Scholarship (MA, Photographic Studies, University of Westminster).[90]
- (2008) Caparo Award of Distinction (MA, Photographic Studies, University of Westminster).[91]
- (2008) Independent Photographers Terry O’Neill Award (shortlisted and exhibited).[92]
- (2008) Ellen-Auerbach-Fellowship for Photography, Akademie der Künste (Berlin).[93][94]
- (2009) Saïd Foundation Scholarship (MA, Art Business, Sotheby’s Institute of Art).[95]
- (2016) Nautilus Book Award (Gold, for The Parachute Paradox & Silver for The Artist's Curse).[96][97]
- (2017) Eric Hoffer Award (for The Parachute Paradox).[98]
- (2017) Finalist, International Book Awards (for The Parachute Paradox).[99]
- (2017) Visual Arts grant, Arab Fund for Arts and Culture (AFAC).[100]
Documentaries and video interviews
Sabella has been the subject of documentaries, including In The Darkroom with Steve Sabella by Nadia Johanne Kabalan (2014).[101] He has also appeared in interviews for Deutsche Welle,[102] France 24,[103] Al Jazeera[104] and The Electronic Intifada.[105]
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See also
- Akademie der Künste
- Kamal Boullata
- British Museum
- List of University of Westminster alumni
- Mathaf: Arab Museum of Modern Art
- Palestinian art
- TED (conference)
References
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- ^ "The Parachute Paradox". Kerber Verlag. Retrieved 19 August 2016.
- ^ Steve Sabella Wikipedia page, Awards section
- ^ TMR (2022-06-15). "Featured Artist: Steve Sabella, Beyond Palestine". The Markaz Review. Retrieved 2026-01-12.
- ^ "The Parachute Paradox". Jerusalem Story. Archived from the original on 2025-09-15. Retrieved 2026-01-12.
- ^ Shemoelof, Mati (2022-10-01). "Decolonizing the Palestinian imagination". Mondoweiss. Retrieved 2026-01-16.
- ^ "Told / Untold / Retold. Tour". universes.art. Retrieved 2026-01-10.
- ^ "Till the End". The British Museum. Retrieved 2026-01-10.
- ^ "Première Biennale Des Photographes Du Monde Arabe Contemporain". universes.art. Retrieved 2026-01-10.
- ^ "FotoFest Biennial 2014 – View From Inside – FotoFest". Retrieved 2026-01-10.
- ^ "Archaeology of the Future" (PDF). Galleria Gaburro.
- ^ "Steve Sabella". www.adk.de (in German). Retrieved 2026-01-10.
- ^ "Ellen Auerbach Fellowship". www.adk.de. Retrieved 2026-01-10.
- ^ "Steve Sabella - Photography 1997-2014". Hatje Cantz. Retrieved 5 November 2014.
- ^ Steve Sabella Independence (PDF). Dubai: Meem Gallery. 2014. p. 40. ISBN 978-1-907051-38-8.
- ^ UNICEF. "The Children of Palestine in the Labour Market" (PDF).
- ^ "The European Commission and UNRWA. Improving the Lives of the Palestinian Refugees" (PDF). April 2007.
- ^ "Palestinian gunmen free U.N. workers". NBC News. 2005-07-30. Retrieved 2026-01-16.
- ^ "Kidnapping new tactic in battle for control of Gaza | CBC News". CBC. Archived from the original on 2023-06-26. Retrieved 2026-01-16.
- ^ Meem Gallery (2014). Steve Sabella Indepence (PDF). Meem Gallery. ISBN 978-1-907051-38-8.
- ^ "Unlocking Visual Codes" (PDF).
- ^ "Unlocking Visual Codes" (PDF).
- ^ Demos, T J (2017). Beyond Finitude: Steve Sabella's 38 Days of Re-collection (PDF). Kerber Verlag. pp. 76–79. ISBN 978-3-7356-0375-3.
- ^ Bruckstein, Almut Shulamit (2017). Fragments From Our Beautiful Future (PDF). Germany: Kerber Verlag. pp. 10–13. ISBN 978-3-7356-0375-3.
- ^ Shohat, Ella (2017). An Aesthetics of Dis/ placement: Steve Sabella's 38 Days of Re-Collection (PDF). Kerber Verlag. ISBN 978-3-7356-0375-3.
- ^ Von Amelunxen, Hubertus (2017). From the Prolegomenon of Steve Sabella. photography 1997 – 2014 (PDF). Kerber Verlag. pp. 50–51. ISBN 978-3-7356-0375-3.
- ^ Shohat, Ella (2017). An Aesthetics of Dis/ placement: Steve Sabella's 38 Days of Re-Collection (PDF). Kerber Verlag. ISBN 978-3-7356-0375-3.
- ^ Archaeology of the Future (PDF). Italy: Maretti Editore. 2014. ISBN 978-88-98855-10-0.
- ^ Archaeology of the Future (PDF). Maretti Editore. 2014. ISBN 978-88-98855-10-0.
- ^ Shohat, Ella (2017). Fragments from Our Beautiful Future (PDF). Kerber Verlag. pp. 62–64. ISBN 978-3-7356-0375-3.
- ^ Muller, Nat (2017). Collecting Notes To And for The Future. Kerber Verlag. pp. 16–17. ISBN 978-3-7356-0375-3.
- ^ Fragments from Our Beautiful Future. ISBN 978-3-7356-0375-3.
- ^ Halasa, Malu. "Beyond Palestine - Layers exhibition catalogue" (PDF).
- ^ Ayad, Myrna. "Exodus And Back" (PDF). Canvas Magazine.
- ^ ""Declaration of Independence," Interview with Artist Steve Sabella". Institute for Palestine Studies. Retrieved 2026-01-16.
- ^ Sabella, Steve. "Unlocking Visual Codes" (PDF).
- ^ Boullata, Kamal (2014). Steve Sabella Photography 1997-2914 (PDF). Hatje Cantz. ISBN 978-3775737678.
- ^ Von Amelunxen, Hubertus (2014). Steve Sabella Photography 1997 - 2014 (PDF). Hatje Cantz. ISBN 978-3775737678.
- ^ "STEVE SABELLA: WAVELENGTHS. The artist from Jerusalem returns to exhibit at Metroquadro" (PDF).
- ^ ""The Era of Essence, Imagination and Hard Work": interview with Palestinian artist Steve Sabella | A M Qattan Foundation". qattanfoundation.org. Retrieved 2026-01-16.
- ^ "STEVE SABELLA: EVERLAND | XIBT Contemporary Art Magazine". Retrieved 2026-01-16.
- ^ Archaeology of the Future (PDF). Maretti Editore. 2014. p. 92. ISBN 978-88-98855-10-0.
- ^ TA-TRUNG. "TA-TRUNG | Fragments From Our Beautiful Future". TA-TRUNG (in German). Retrieved 2026-01-18.
- ^ "Vernissage TranscenDance Steve Sabella – Der Divan – das Arabische Kulturhaus in Berlin" (in German). 2026-01-22. Retrieved 2026-01-18.
- ^ "babelmed.net". www.babelmed.net. Retrieved 2026-01-16.
- ^ "Told / Untold / Retold. Tour". universes.art. Retrieved 2026-01-16.
- ^ "FotoFest Biennial 2014 – View From Inside – FotoFest". Retrieved 2026-01-16.
- ^ "Première Biennale Des Photographes Du Monde Arabe Contemporain". universes.art. Retrieved 2026-01-16.
- ^ Nel Mezzo del Mezzo (PDF). Palermo: Riso Museum. 2017. ISBN 978-88-6164-349-9.
- ^ "Hanaa Malallah and Steve Sabella featured in The British Museum in London. - ARTZOTIC". artzotic.com. 2022-02-16. Retrieved 2026-01-16.
- ^ "BLOCKS | STORIE DI DIALOGHI OLTRE I LIMITI – RISO – Museo regionale d'Arte Moderna e Contemporanea di Palermo" (in Italian). Retrieved 2026-01-16.
- ^ Archaeology of the Future (PDF). Maretti Editore. 2014. ISBN 978-88-98855-10-0.
- ^ "photographic print | British Museum". The British Museum. Archived from the original on 2022-04-18. Retrieved 2026-01-22.
- ^ "'This Donation Gives Meaning to Our Life:' Collectors Claude and France Lemand Donate 1,300 Works to Paris's Institut du Monde Arabe". Artnet News. 2018-10-29. Retrieved 2026-01-22.
- ^ "Told / Untold / Retold. Tour". universes.art. Retrieved 2026-01-22.
- ^ a b c d Steve Sabella Photography 1997-2014 (PDF). Hatje Cantz. 2014. ISBN 978-3775737678.
- ^ "Bahrain Authority for Culture and Antiquities - Kingdom of Bahrain | Past Events". culture.gov.bh. Retrieved 2026-01-22.
- ^ "Steve Sabella". Barjeel Art Foundation. Retrieved 2026-01-22.
- ^ German Cool (PDF). Salsali Private Museum. 2015.
- ^ "STEVE SABELLA | Dalloul Art Foundation". dafbeirut.org. Retrieved 2026-01-22.
- ^ "Contemporary Art Platform Kuwait at Art Paris Art Fair 2018". Artsy. Retrieved 2026-01-22.
- ^ ""NEIGHBOURS IN DIALOGUE", ISTANBUL COLLECTION FOR ARS AEVI, SARAJEVO | beral madra". Retrieved 2026-01-22.
- ^ "Steve Sabella - Photography 1997-2014". Hatje Cantz. Retrieved 5 November 2014.
- ^ "Palestine UNSETTLED". SteveSabella.Space. Retrieved 2026-01-22.
- ^ De/Colonising Palestine (PDF). Geneva: Geneva Graduate Institute. 2025. p. 39. ISBN 978-2-940600-62-5.
- ^ Bocco, Riccardo; Saïd, Ibrahim, eds. (2025). De/Colonising Palestine : Contemporary Debates. eLivres de l’Institut. Genève: Graduate Institute Publications. ISBN 978-2-940600-51-9.
- ^ De/Colonising Palestine Contemporary Debates (PDF). Geneva: Graduate Institute Publications. 2025. pp. 10–13, 39 403-412. ISBN 978-2-940600-51-9.
- ^ Kamal, Boullata. Palestinian Art: From 1850 to the Present. Saqi Books. pp. 301–303. ISBN 978-0863566486.
- ^ AMIRSADEGHI, HOSSEIN (2009). New Vision Arab Contemporary Art in the 21st Century. Thames & Hudson. ISBN 9780500976982.
- ^ Keep Your Eyes on the Wall : Palestinian Landscapes. Textuel. 2013. ISBN 978-2-84597-468-5.
- ^ Shore, Steven (2014). From Galilee to the Negev. Phaidon Press. pp. 104–106. ISBN 978-0714867069.
- ^ View From Inside – Contemporary Arab Photography, Video and Mixed Media Art. Schlit Publishing. 2014. ISBN 9789053308257.
{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link) - ^ Nel Mezzo Del Mezzo: Contemporary Art in the Mediterranean (PDF). Palermo: Museo Riso. pp. 200–202. ISBN 978-88-6164-349-9.
- ^ Shohat, Ella (2017). Ella Shohat | On The Arab Jew, Palestine, and Other Displacements. Pluto Press. pp. Introduction. ISBN 978-0745399492.
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