On the Move:


Exploring Nomadic Cultures

National Museum of Qatar, 2022

Team:

12 specialists

7 departments

4 vendors

Role:

Visual Strategy

Color Palette / Typography Direction

Wayfinding Design

Team Coordination

Duration:

14 months


Background and problem

Many people assume nomads live simply. Museums reinforced this misconception through static artifact displays that failed to show the adaptability, complexity, and beauty of these cultures.

The National Museum of Qatar needed an exhibition exploring nomadic peoples from Central Sahara, Qatar, and Mongolia that revealed the meaningful social relationships and sophisticated cultural systems pastoralists have developed. I supervised environmental design development with OPERA Amsterdam and the curatorial team to create immersive spatial experiences.


On the Move explores the lives of nomadic and semi-nomadic pastoralists who move with the herds they tend, revealing rich cultural forms and social structures through objects, historical images, and archival footage.

What is the exhibition about?

Bilingual design as a system, not an afterthought


Arabic and English typography were treated as equal visual elements. Label hierarchy, reading direction, and spatial rhythm were resolved as one unified system.

The exhibition needed to show complexity, not simplicity

The exhibition needed to position these cultures as sophisticated survival systems grounded in technical mastery and cultural precision—not romantic myths or primitive stereotypes.

Spatial sequencing drove the narrative

Visitor flow was designed to move from broad cultural context into intimate object-level detail — each room shift marking a deeper layer of understanding.

Objects

400+

Paintings, archival footage, photography

Regions

3

Qatar · Central Sahara · Mongolia

Curators

6

Columbia · Cambridge · Vienna

Context

Flagship exhibition — FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022

One of Qatar Museums' most visited exhibitions that year

Impact

NMoQ's first ever travelling exhibition

Doha 2022 → National Museum of Mongolia 2024