The National - News

In praise of winter days and Salvator Mundi

- DEBORAH LINDSAY WILLIAMS Deborah Lindsay Williams is a professor of literature at NYU Abu Dhabi Emirates Palace in Abu Dhabi

Driving along the Corniche at this time of year, with the car windows down to the soft winter air coming in the windows, it’s easy to forget where I am. In the evening darkness, I experience a kind of cultural synaesthes­ia: the red, green, and white lights draped around traffic poles and across the rooftops initially signal Christmas to my Western eye. Then I refocus and see the pride of National Day. I love this particular Abu Dhabi season, which actually begins in late October, with Halloween candy jostling on the shelves with various Thanksgivi­ng products and National Day decoration­s. Every year, when I see the sparkling curlicues of Arabic calligraph­y spelling out National Day, I resolve to learn Arabic, and every year, my ageing brain proves that it’s impossible to teach an old dog new tricks.

A simple thing like celebratio­ns sharing a colour palette might not seem like a big deal, but given the state of things in the world at this moment, I’m looking for signs of tolerance wherever I can, even if it’s just the Christmas tree standing in the lobby of the Emirates Palace hotel.

It’s not a Christmas present, but the Louvre Abu Dhabi just got a gift, in the shape of a Leonardo da Vinci. Salvator

Mundi will be visiting the museum sometime next year. I am sure there are those who would say that the money might have been better spent on other things and I might have thought so too, except for a trip that I took last month to the Dubai Air Show.

At the air show, you could get everything from new Wi-Fi systems for your private plane to in-flight targets for drones to high-grade military weaponry. Outside the exhibit hall, the amazing stunt pilots who dazzle us along the Corniche on National Day, spiraled through the air as if in defiance of the laws of physics. Inside the hall, elegantly dressed executives strolled through the exhibits, stopping to chat with acquaintan­ces or to snap photos of particular­ly attractive missiles. One of the exhibits, from a US company, caught my eye with its promotiona­l video for a new product. The tagline for the product was “high lethality, low cost”.

Is that what we want? Of course “low cost” here is a pretty relative term. Maybe this product doesn’t cost quite as much as Salvator

Mundi, but it’s not quite shawarma-and-fries, either. Judging from the other things I saw on display in the exhibit hall, however, trading in your Leonardo wouldn’t actually get you that much: weapons are pretty big-ticket items.

I know it’s unrealisti­c for me to expect that people will

I don’t think the world can be saved by a single painting, but the world might be a better place if we spent more on art

stop wanting to buy bombs, or to stop wanting bombs that are bigger than the other guy’s bombs. Bigger is better, apparently, when it comes to bombs.

And I know that tolerance on a deep level takes more than Christmas trees or colour schemes. But I’m thinking that maybe spending vast sums of money on art isn’t such a bad thing, in the grand scheme of it all.

I am not saying that the world can be saved by a single painting, far from it, but the world might be a significan­tly better place if we spent more money on art than on bombs. What if we measured our bargains with metrics of beauty, instead of lethality?

 ?? Ravindrana­th K / The National ??
Ravindrana­th K / The National
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates