Beijing: The National Museum of Qatar (NMoQ) opened today the On the Move exhibition at the National Museum of China, marking the first collaboration between the two institutions and a new milestone in the exhibition's international journey as a legacy project of Years of Culture. Presented in South Gallery 3, the exhibition will remain open to the public until 9 September. First presented at the National Museum of Qatar in 2022 as part of the Qatar-MENASA Year of Culture, On the Move has since evolved into a travelling cultural platform, extending Qatar's cultural dialogue with international audiences. As NMoQ's first travelling exhibition, it was later presented at the National Museum of Mongolia in Ulaanbaatar in 2024 as its inaugural presentation outside Qatar, before arriving in China.
According to Qatar News Agency, for its Beijing presentation, the exhibition features more than 150 artefacts from Qatar alongside photographs, films, oral histories, and archival material, inviting visitors to discover the lives, knowledge, and creativity of Qatar's nomadic and semi-nomadic communities from the 18th century until the discovery of oil. HE Director of the National Museum of Qatar Sheikh Abdulaziz bin Hamad Al-Thani stated that the museum is proud to bring On the Move to audiences in Beijing. The exhibition shares an important part of Qatar's heritage, exploring the traditions, knowledge, and ways of life shaped by generations of movement across the landscape. Through this exhibition, the aim is to foster greater understanding of the cultural values, resilience, and ingenuity that have defined nomadic communities in Qatar.
Tania Al Majid, Deputy Director of Curatorial Affairs at the National Museum of Qatar, added that one of the most rewarding aspects of curating On the Move has been the opportunity to share a more nuanced understanding of nomadic history in Qatar. Through historical objects, photographs, oral histories, and multimedia installations, the exhibition highlights the experiences, knowledge, and traditions of communities that not only adapted but thrived in a challenging environment. It is a human-centred narrative presented to the Chinese public.
Marking the inaugural collaboration between NMoQ and the National Museum of China, the Beijing presentation builds upon the cultural legacy established during the Qatar-China 2016 Year of Culture. Nearly a decade after the Qatar-China 2016 Year of Culture, the exhibition renews cultural dialogue between the two countries through a major museum collaboration and highlights how Years of Culture continues to support long-term partnerships, institutional exchange, and deeper public understanding of Qatar's heritage.
Breaking away from traditional ethnographic displays, the exhibition presents an engaging exploration of nomadic life in Qatar through objects, photographs, oral histories, multimedia installations, and interactive experiences. It explores the relationships between people, animals, the environment, and material culture, while highlighting the knowledge, creativity, traditions, and social practices that shaped nomadic communities.
A key feature of the exhibition is Mapping Migration Memories, an immersive and sound installation created in collaboration with Virginia Commonwealth University School of the Arts Qatar (VCUarts Qatar). Set within a landscape of sand, the work follows two Qatari women as they retrace and reimagine the seasonal journeys of their nomadic ancestors, reflecting on memory, movement, and belonging across generations.
The international journey of On the Move reflects the continuing impact of Years of Culture, which creates platforms for long-term cultural dialogue, institutional collaboration, and people-to-people understanding between Qatar and communities around the world.