
New Books in Popular Culture Beth Derderian, "Art Capital: Museum Politics and the Making of the Louvre Abu Dhabi" (Stanford UP, 2026)
Apr 4, 2026
Beth Derderian, Assistant Professor of Modern Middle East Studies and Anthropology at Brandeis, studies museums, art, and heritage in the Middle East. She explores the rise of museum franchising and market forces through the Louvre Abu Dhabi. Multiple short scenes probe how capital, state ties, and institutional growth reshape exhibitions, artistic practices, and public presentation of difference.
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Museums As Statecraft And Global Projection
- Museums function as tools of state formation and international projection in the Gulf rather than neutral cultural spaces.
- The Louvre brand transplant in Abu Dhabi tests how a European national museum's authority translates into a wealthy, diverse post-oil capital like Abu Dhabi.
Art Capital Means Money And Meaning
- Art Capital refers both to economic and cultural capital and to Abu Dhabi as the UAE capital, highlighting multiple politics of value behind museum projects.
- The Sadiyat development required massive economic investment and promised cultural/social capital through training, branding, and visibility.
Interlude Vignettes Protect Anonymity
- Derderian used interlude vignettes of exhibitions before chapters to immerse readers while preserving interviewee anonymity.
- This structure lets her describe artworks and gallery moments without including identifying images or names that would breach protection.



