Mohammad Omer Khalil: Common Ground

March 28 - May 31, 2026

Opening Reception: Saturday, March 28, 3-6PM

Mohammad Omer Khalil with his work Petra VIII (1994). Photo: Samoel González.

 

EXHIBITION SITES

Blackburn Study Center March 28 – May 31

Twelve Gates Arts April 3 - May 15

Arab American National Museum March 28 - May 31

Jay Seven Inc., Brooklyn March 28 - May 31 

Maqām Studio, Brooklyn April 26  

 

ON DISPLAY
New York Public Library: Rose Main Reading Room (May 16–31)

The Metropolitan Museum of Art: Islamic Art Wing, Gallery 450


Over the next three years, the Robert Blackburn Printmaking Workshop will foreground its international connections through Global Impressions, a programming initiative that builds on Blackburn’s legacy of solidarity with artists from the Global South, showing how print has functioned as both cultural resistance and diasporic exchange. Mohammad Omer Khalil, Common Ground curated by Amina Ahmed and Jenna Hamed is the first iteration of the Global Impressions series to be held at the Blackburn Study Center, a space dedicated to the history and legacy of Robert Blackburn. 

 

Programs at the Blackburn Study Center are made possible with major support from the Teiger Foundation.  Mohammad Omer Khalil: Common Ground is also supported by The Jenni Crain Foundation, an initiative dedicated to preserving the legacy of the esteemed artist and curator. 




CHECKLIST

PRE-ORDER Exhibition Catalogue Mohammad Omer Khalil: Common Ground




Blackburn Study Center

Robert Blackburn Printmaking Workshop

323 West 39th Street, New York, NY 10018

WED - SUN 12 - 7PM

Photo: Samoel González.


After Khalil’s arrival in New York in 1967, the Robert Blackburn Printmaking Workshop emerged as a crucial artistic home for him at a time when there were few spaces in the city where non-white artists could exhibit their work. Upon meeting Blackburn in 1969, he joined the workshop and entered a community grounded in collaborative printmaking, mentorship, and mutual support—a context that would inspire Khalil to form his own studio in 1970. It was also Blackburn who invited Khalil to the Asilah Cultural Moussem in Morocco in 1978, a burgeoning residency program committed, as Jenna Hamed writes, to “delink[ing] from elitist and inaccessible art programming organized for the privileged few in Western societies, and to assert a ‘common ground’ for ‘Third World’ artists, intellectuals, and poets to connect with their counterparts from the ‘other world.’” ¹

For the next fifty years, Khalil continued to live between Asilah and New York, running the printshop for nearly three decades and working with artists from across the globe, which reinforced his commitment to collaboration, pedagogy, and printmaking as a shared language. Common Ground takes its title from Khalil’s series of fifteen etchings produced between 1985 and 1995 that gather the light and color of the Moroccan coastal town of Asilah into dense, atmospheric abstractions. These works trace a passage through the formative sites and experiences that shape his art: the landscapes of Sudan that left an enduring imprint, the classical etching techniques he refined in Florence, the transnational camaraderie forged through Asilah, and New York, where he raised his family, built a life in art, and continues to work today. 

Across these locations, Khalil has not only been a practicing artist but also an influential teacher and master printer—leading workshops in Asilah while, in New York, founding his own printmaking atelier and teaching between 1973 and 2012 at Pratt Institute, The New School, Columbia University, and New York University. From this studio, Khalil produced editions for canonical artists including John Wilson, Louise Nevelson, Mavis Pusey, Camille Billops, Emma Amos, Norman Lewis, Sean Scully, Romare Bearden, Jim Dine, among others, contributing significantly to the history of contemporary printmaking. Yet despite his profound impact as a collaborator, educator, and bridge between artistic communities in Africa, Europe, and the U.S., Khalil has not received commensurate mainstream recognition for his artistic contributions.


Common Ground unfolds across multiple venues to mirror the wide reach of his “transcommunal” practice, one that both descends from and extends a lineage of printmakers devoted to the possibilities of etching and to rendering the full vibrancy and tonal range of Blackness.

1. Hamed, Jenna. “Walking a Common Ground: Mohammad Omer Khalil in Asilah.” 2023.

On view from March 28–May 31, Mohammad Omer Khalil: Common Ground is a survey exhibition of works by the New York-based Sudanese artist and master printmaker Mohammad Omer Khalil (b.1936), widely recognized as the first major printmaker from the Arab world. Curated by Amina Ahmed and Jenna Hamed with the Robert Blackburn Printmaking Workshop, the exhibition presents a selection of his paintings and printed works spanning six decades, employing collage and offering tribute to the scenes, sounds, and syntax influential to Khalil’s visual language. 

The multi-venue and multi-city exhibition unfolds across five partner venues including the Blackburn Study Center (New York), Twelve Gates Arts (Philadelphia), Arab American National Museum (Dearborn), Maqām Studio (Brooklyn), and Jay Seven Inc (Brooklyn), alongside a robust series of programs and workshops in partnership with The Africa Center, Anthology Film Archives, Pratt Institute, and Queens Museum.

The exhibition is accompanied by a catalogue featuring essays from the co-curators alongside Dr. Bayan Abubakr, Sudanese historian at Yale University; Omar Berrada, writer, curator, and Director of Dar al-Ma'mûn, Marrakech; Amir ElSaffar, composer, jazz trumpeter, and vocalist; Jennifer Farrell, Jordan Schnitzer Curator of Drawings and Prints at the Metropolitan Museum of Art; Tumelo Mosaka, Curator in African American and African Diaspora Studies at Columbia University; Navina Najat Haidar, Curator of Islamic Art at the Metropolitan Museum of Art; Ben Rejali, Editor of Khabar Keslan; Olivia Shao, Curator at the Drawing Center and Khalil’s former student; Ksenia Nouril, Assistant Director of the International Program at the Museum of Modern Art; Sumesh Sharma, Curator and Founder of the Clark House Initiative, Mumbai; including his family and friends.

Khalil is known for his work fusing Sudanese visual traditions and European classical training, influenced by a life lived between Morocco and New York. Trained in Khartoum, Sudan and later in Florence, Italy in fresco and etching, Khalil translates this rigorous foundation into atmospheric, abstract compositions that explore the interplay of light and dark, color and pattern. His images often incorporate found and everyday materials—postage stamps, envelopes, fabrics, crushed cans—alongside literary, art-historical, and pop-cultural references, such as a series of homages to the legendary Egyptian singer Umm Kulthum. These elements form mosaic-like surfaces in which symbols dissolve into pattern and re-emerge, echoing the slippage between memory and forgetting, the personal and the collective.

 

EXHIBITION SITES

Twelve Gates Arts: April 3 - May 15
Twelve Gates Arts in Philadelphia exhibits Khalil’s work paying homage to Sudan, featuring a selection of collage paintings from the Suakin series alongside a portfolio of etchings based on Tayeb Salih’s novel, Season of Migration to the North (1966). The gallery invites the local community by providing reading materials and rare footage of Sudan, serving as a space for research.
twelvegatesarts.org 106 N 2nd St, Philadelphia, PA 19106
 

Arab American National Museum: March 28 - May 31
Arab American National Museum in Dearborn shows a selection of collage paintings and printed works inspired by his travels between Sudan and Morocco. The installation includes a selection of historical ephemera on Khalil’s life and work alongside a soundscape of Khalil’s oral history and recording of Umm Kulthum’s album, both of which are sourced from the Museum’s archives. 
arabamericanmuseum.org 13624 Michigan Ave, Dearborn, MI
 

Jay Seven Inc., Brooklyn: March 28 - May 31 
Jay Seven Inc. in Brooklyn stages an interactive research archive featuring a curated selection of books, music, prints, and ephemera that trace the influences and making of Khalil’s collage paintings and printed works. 
jayseveninc.com 113 S 6th St, 2 FL, Brooklyn, NY 11249


Maqām Studio Brooklyn: April 26  
Maqām Studio in Brooklyn features a special presentation of a collage painting from Khalil’s Umm Kulthum series, accompanied by live performances from local musicians.
maqamstudio.com Location provided upon RSVP.
 


ON DISPLAY
The New York Public Library:
May 16–31, 2026
NYPL will present items from its collection including ephemera from Khalil’s Artist File, marking nearly 60 years of living and working in New York City. The display will also feature books he printed in collaboration with other artists along with a selection of historical and literary texts and media chosen by Khalil, drawing the many connections to literature, music, and travel present in his work. On view May 16–31, 2026 in the Rose Main Reading Room, the display is curated by the curatorial duo in collaboration with Hiba Abid, Curator of Middle East Studies at NYPL.


The Metropolitan Museum of Art
At the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Composition with Arabic Calligraphy (1966) is currently on view in Gallery 450 of the Islamic Art wing, marking the occasion of the Museum’s recent acquisition of sixty prints by Khalil. 


PRESS CONTACTS:

Samour Relations - André & Evan Lenox-Samour

andre@samour.world | evan@samour.world