Ahmad Darkhabani
Ahmad Darkhabani is an architect, independent curator, researcher, and writer originally from Damascus, Syria. He is currently based in Graz, Austria, where he teaches as a Lecturer at the Institute for Contemporary Art (IZK) within the Faculty of Architecture at Graz University of Technology. Additionally, he works with the Art & Architecture Education and Mediation Department at the Universalmuseum Joanneum, which includes Kunsthaus Graz and Neue Galerie Graz.
In his curatorial practice, Darkhabani collaborates with artists to examine the fragility of reality and life. His work focuses on the cultural constructs that uphold the governance structures established by the political machine. From this standpoint, his practice challenges our understanding of a world shaped by oppressive policies and imaginary binaries– such as East and West, Local and International, Center and Periphery.
Grounded in Critical Theory, Darkhabani's academic research explores the intersection of contemporary art and architecture, focusing on their role in constructing reality and the social sphere. Drawing on critical genealogy and postcolonial theory, he argues that architecture is not merely a passive backdrop but an active participant in shaping societal structures.
Photo: © Amel Bešlagić, 2025
Darkhabani co-curated several exhibitions at the Grazer Kunstverein, including The Actress by Aimée Zito Lema and Becket MWN, The Elder Poem by Elisabeth von Samsonow, and Cameo by Bianca Baldi (2021). He was also a member of the curatorial collective Das Gesellschaftliche Ding at Annenstraße 53. His essays have appeared in GAT: Magazine for Architecture, Art, and Cultural Critique under the title “How Deep Must We Dig to See the Invisible? On the Obscure Exercise of Power” and on the Al-Jumhuriya platform as “On the Necessity of Art: A Call for Artistic Revival in Post-Assad Syria.”