Ricardo Mbarkho is a Lebanese artist, researcher, and assistant professor. He has produced video and digital arts. Mbarkho's current artwork remains exclusively what he calls Socioeconomic Art practices. His practice spans two decades of exhibitions, publications and academic research, involving experimental market art in the Middle East and worldwide. He lives and works in Beirut.
In his digital images, as well as in his time-based work, he investigates multiple questions related to interactivity, language, communication, cultural industries, history of art as well as the visual representation within the sociopolitical sphere.
In 1992 he enrolled at the Institut supérieur des beauxâÂÂarts in Beirut, completing foundational studies in visual arts. Seeking broader theoretical perspectives, he moved to Paris in 1996 where he simultaneously attended the ÃÂcole nationale supérieure des BeauxâÂÂArts and the ÃÂcole supérieure dâÂÂétudes cinématographiques (ESEC), earning a DNSAP in Visual Arts and a diploma in Cinematography. While at ENSBA, he participated in an LVMHâÂÂfunded exchange at Carnegie Mellon University's College of Fine Arts in Pittsburgh (1998âÂÂ1999), where early experiments in network art and algorithmic image processing laid the groundwork for his subsequent digital works.
Mbarkho completed doctoralâÂÂlevel research in Information and Communication Sciences at Université Sorbonne ParisàNord, focusing on the interaction between media arts and cultural industries.
Since 2002 Mbarkho has taught at the Lebanese Academy of Fine Arts (ALBA), where he is Assistant Professor and Head of the Research Department. He has designed interdisciplinary curricula that bridge theory, critical studies and creative practice, and has supervised graduate theses on cultural and creative industries.
His essays have appeared in peerâÂÂreviewed journals such as Leonardo published by MIT Press, SAGE and Cambridge Scholars.
In 1998 Mbarkho met French artist AlexandreàGurita, whose BiennaleàdeàParis had embraced antiâÂÂspectacular, deâÂÂinstitutionalised art forms. Together they articulated InvisualàArt, a mode of artistic practice that abandons both material and immaterial objects in favour of information, situation and protocol. Rather than producing works to be seen, the artist designs conditions, mindsets or socioâÂÂeconomic models that operate independently of a viewing public. Gurita provided the institutional framework through the Biennale de Paris, the Revue de Paris, and the Ecole nationale d'art de Paris (ENDA), while Mbarkho developed theoretical and practical methodologies through published texts, art projects such as TabboulehàDay and the Bible by ChatGPT, and academic framework with the Atelier of research and creation in invusual art, at the Lebanese Academy of Fine Arts - University of Balamand in Beirut.
2010àâ Prize of the Lebanese Ministry of Culture for Contemporary Arts, Visual Art Forum, Beirut.
Critics have linked Mbarkho's invisual socio-econimic and dematerialised strategies as rooted in informational aesthetics, post-conceptual art, and resistance concepts of Duchamp, Deleuze and Foucault, as well as "the institutional critique of HansàHaacke," noting his distinct reâÂÂworking of Lebanese cultural and religious symbols.
Online archive of BiennaleÃÂ deÃÂ Paris projects
ResearchGate profile