The National - News

PAINTER CREATES BUZZ BY TURNING COFFEE INTO ARTISTIC EXPRESSION

After a late-night accident with a cup of coffee, Ahmed Al Dosary now paints using the beans, and he says Emirati artists need more support, writes Shireena Al Nowais

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Ahmed Al Dosary huddled in a small room in his house in Dubai and settled in for a long night of painting. He was determined to paint through the night to finish his portrait of Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid, Vice President and Ruler of Dubai.

The artist often stays up to paint, sleeping but a few hours before putting away his brushes and attending his government job at Dubai’s public prosecutio­n.

Coffee in hand, a vigorous stir and a tap of the spoon later, a drop of coffee is spilt on his canvas.

While most artists would throw away the coffee-stained canvas and start over, Al Dosary thought, “why not paint with coffee?”

“I love the shades of brown and the coffee stain had a beautiful colour,” he says.

So he became the first Emirati artist to paint using coffee beans.

“I mix different types of coffee with different levels of water to make shades of brown. The shades I produce with the coffee beans, I’ve never been able to create with oil paints,” he says.

But the depth in tone comes at a price, his perishable coffee paintings must be immediatel­y framed and covered in glass to be preserved. “It will get damaged if only a drop of water falls on it,” he says, pointing to a two-year-old coffee painting still in pristine condition.

Al Dosary, 31, began creating coffee artwork two years ago and only recently moved to oil painting. He says he discovered his talent almost 10 years ago.

“I started really young and used to steal my brother’s notebooks and scribble on them when I was four years old, then I started with the usual childhood drawings – a tree and the sun with a bird on the side. It was always just a hobby,” he says.

His first major piece of art was a blooming rose he painted in 2008.

“That is when I realised that I might have talent. After I drew the rose, I got a lot of requests from friends and family.”

By the time Al Dosary discovered he had talent, he had a steady government job and had studied law, not art.

“It was a passion of mine, a hobby. I never thought of studying it or being a profession­al artist at the time.”

Al Dosary is yet to exhibit his artwork but plans to display his work on social media, rather than in an art gallery, where he says Emirati artists are not given enough support.

“I want to but unfortunat­ely there is no support for Emirati artists. Everywhere I want to exhibit asks for large sums of money for rent and charges for each painting I want to exhibit.”

The price also differs according to the size of the painting.

“I wish art would be taken as a serious subject like medicine and law and that there would be more support for Emiratis. There are many talented Emirati artists who are never given the opportunit­y or have the resources to showcase their work,” he says.

He would like to see Emiratis provided with a dedicated space to exhibit their art work free of charge. “These exhibition­s can then maybe take a small percentage from the sales instead of asking artists for huge amounts of money before they have even sold anything.

“What if no paintings are sold?” he says. “Then the artist will have lost money he doesn’t have by paying the exhibition.”

Today, Al Dosary has more than two dozen oil and coffee paintings in his room, which he calls his personal studio.

His studio is draped with paintings of nature, President Sheikh Khalifa, King Salman of Saudi Arabia, a remake of Da Vinci’s self-portrait and many others.

“I love Da Vinci. Every painting of his is a mystery. I love the Last Supper and his self-portrait and most of his artwork.

“But drawing the Rulers is my favourite,” he says, while working on a coffee painting of Sheikh Hamdan bin Mohammed, Crown Prince of Dubai.

Al Dosary dreams of having his own art gallery one day and dedicating his life to art.

“There is no support for painters. I need my government job.”

So, until that dream becomes reality, he will continue to paint through his evenings, then wake up at 6.30am to attend his government job.

“One day, I want to produce classical paintings just like Da Vinci’s in my own atelier.”

 ?? Anna Nielsen for The National ?? Ahmed Al Dosary details his coffee portrait of Sheikh Hamdan bin Mohammed, Crown Prince of Dubai, at his studio. The painter discovered his medium by happy accident and he hopes to display his artwork in a gallery some day
Anna Nielsen for The National Ahmed Al Dosary details his coffee portrait of Sheikh Hamdan bin Mohammed, Crown Prince of Dubai, at his studio. The painter discovered his medium by happy accident and he hopes to display his artwork in a gallery some day
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