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WITH SAUDI MODERN ART, THERE IS MORE THAN MEETS THE EYE

▶ AlUla exhibition paints new picture of kingdom’s creative landscape and aims to spur collectors into sharing rarely seen pieces, writes Razmig Bedirian

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The modern era of Saudi art is somewhat ill-defined. A scarcity of studies and academic inquiries leave a lot of blanks in the arc between Saudi modern and contempora­ry art. However, an exhibition in AlUla seeks the help of private collectors to draw a thread from the 1950s onwards.

More than Meets the Eye is running at Maraya until April 27 alongside the AlUla Arts Festival. It comprises artworks that come exclusivel­y from private collectors in Saudi Arabia, meaning that several pieces have never been displayed in public before.

While not a definite trajectory, the exhibition aims to advance discussion­s and provide insight into the creative approach of Saudi artists, as well as identify themes and concerns that bound works produced in the past 70 years.

It is also part of the pre-opening programme for AlUla’s future contempora­ry art museum and showcases the aspiration­s of the institutio­n.

The exhibition is curated by Effat Abdullah Fadag, an associate professor of fine arts at the University of Jeddah and King AbdulAziz University.

“This exhibition is a motivation to start a dialogue [on Saudi art history],” Fadag says. She adds that she also seeks to blur the lines between modern and contempora­ry works by showing how artistic patterns are much more fluid than the categories imply. “It is a different canon than the western canon,” she says.

The first gallery defines the tone of the exhibition and what it attempts to accomplish. Modern paintings juxtapose contempora­ry sculptures and mixed media works, all addressing the theme of belonging. An untitled 1987 work by Mohammed

Al Saleem shows a landscape from the city of Murat with traditiona­l homes looming over each other in ochre layers. The painting diverges from the undulating landscape works that the artist is best known for.

Yet, it presents Al Saleem’s appreciati­on for his native landscape at a time when he was distant from it. The artist had gone to Italy on a scholarshi­p provided by the Saudi Ministry of Communicat­ion, and when prompted to paint a landscape during his studies in art, he produced a work in homage to his hometown. Al Saleem was one of many male artists who benefited from the government scholarshi­p programme that provided opportunit­ies to study in western and Arab countries.

Al Saleem’s painting is displayed next to an untitled work by Abdulhalim Radwi. The 1978 painting was also produced abroad, while Radwi was studying in Italy, where he had gone at his own expense.

The work alludes to styles that Radwi is known for, with figurative forms that lean towards abstractio­n.

“Radwi was one of those artists who was not Saudi at that time,” Fadag says. “He had his own money to go and study in Italy. The government then gave him Saudi citizenshi­p.”

Ayman Yossri Daydban also has a similar narrative, having been granted Saudi citizenshi­p later in life.

The artist is represente­d with two steel sculptures from his 2011 Reflection­s series, which, like the other works in the first gallery, take on the theme of belonging.

In a 2021 untitled painting, Alia Ahmad addresses the questions of identity as the Saudi artist travelled to the UK to study. The abstract piece is meant to convey her memories of Riyadh and the movement of its sands, Fadag says, with contempora­ry artists undergoing experience­s similar to their predecesso­rs in the 20th century but rendering them in disparate ways.

These concepts resonate further in the show with Fahad Al Naymah’s sprawling threepiece painting Camel Pageant, produced in 2016, harkening to the local significan­ce of the desert animals, particular­ly their use as a mode of transporta­tion across history.

Cowboy Code by Ahmed Mater is an expansive installati­on that, as the name suggests, lists the moral code of cowboys. It has been created

out of hundreds of red plastic strips used as ammunition for toy cap guns.

He places them next to one another like tiles, taking inspiratio­n from the 1960s Spaghetti Western films he used to watch, and juxtaposes their similariti­es with the principles of Saudi tribes.

The work’s intent is highlighte­d in its curation, displayed opposite two photograph­s by Adel Al Quraishi that portray two Bedouins from the desert of Nafud. “Al

Quraishi was mentored by an Italian photograph­er who photograph­ed these two Bedouins 30 years before,” Fadag says.

He employed similar modes of compositio­n as well as pigment printing techniques to pay tribute to his mentor.

One of the most stirring artworks is a three-channel video installati­on by Reem Al Nasser. Produced in 2019, Outside Inside features three wooden tripods.

The videos within the viewfinder­s present anxious-riddled scenes of a person yearning to break free from behind locked doors.

The accompanyi­ng sound of struck steel and bolts refusing to give way sharpens the perturbed nature of the videos. In the last of the three works, the bolt finally comes undone.

It is based on the artist’s own experience­s and brings to mind the struggles of women in society.

Love in its many forms is the theme that binds many of the works in the next room.

Rita, painted between 1978 and 1981, is Bakr Sheikhoun’s homage to his mother. Fahad Hajailan’s untitled 2001 work, meanwhile, presents a portrait of his wife with vibrant, frenzied greens, blues and reds. Ali Alruzaiza’s Gates Series, on the other hand, is the artist’s watercolou­r designs of the gates within his house.

The exhibition then moves towards the concept of spirituali­ty, beginning with an artwork of thread steel and light projection by Muhannad Shono. Letters in Light (Lines We Write) is formed in a shape that brings to mind the rehal, or the book stand associated with the Quran. With the ethereal sound design and the rippling lights, the work instills a feeling of peace and calm, and is an apt entryway for this portion of the exhibition. The artists deal with the theme of spirituali­ty in all sorts of unexpected ways.

Lulwah Al Homoud’s Al Hamdellah presents her take on calligraph­y and traditiona­l geometric designs with a gold leaf painting. Dana Awartani presents a soundless single-channel video that shows her sweeping the sand and dust in a living room into a single mound.

The final stretch of the exhibition, meanwhile, aims to bring to light the necessity of collectors in the artistic ecosystem, whether in supporting and commission­ing artworks or helping bolster academic inquiries in art history. The gallery contains exhibition literature, including from a 1999 show that featured Mahdi Al Jeraibi and Aber Al Fatni, as well as artworks by artists who were collectors themselves, such as Alruzaiza.

After all, More than Meets the Eye would not have been possible without the contributi­on of private collectors within the kingdom.

“When I was searching and looking, I was trying to think about the definition of a collector in Saudi Arabia,” Fadag says. “It’s totally different. Many of them don’t even know they are collectors and simply have works because they are passionate. This is the amazing part. They don’t know they are part of this ecosystem.”

Fadag says she was amazed by the works within many of these private collection­s as she began visiting them for the exhibition.

“It was like I was swimming in a sea,” she says. “I was very happy just opening doors and seeing these amazing artworks that I never saw before. This exhibition is just scratching the surface.

“The amount of informatio­n that I got was amazing.”

More than Meets the Eye arrives as a result of contributi­ons from about half a dozen collectors. Yet, there are many of them still spread around the kingdom who have troves of artworks that can help enrich the understand­ing of modern and contempora­ry Saudi art.

Some collectors declined to loan works for the exhibition, Fadag says, pointing to the idea of loaning remaining a novelty in Saudi Arabia. However, she hopes exhibition­s like this will help show how essential their collaborat­ion is for the narrative of Saudi art.

“It’s very new for them to take their work out,” she says. “But with these exhibition­s, we are introducin­g people to show their work. Hopefully, it will help us find new collectors and collection­s that nobody has shed light on.”

More than Meets the Eye is running at Maraya, AlUla, until April 27

I was happy just opening doors and seeing these amazing artworks. This exhibition is just scratching the surface EFFAT ABDULLAH FADAG Curator

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 ?? Photos The Royal Commission for AlUla ?? From far left, artworks on display at More than Meets the Eye include an untitled 1978 painting by Abdulhalim Radwi; Ahmed Mater’s Cowboy Code is a nod to Western films; Muhannad Shono’s Letters in Light (Lines We Write)
Photos The Royal Commission for AlUla From far left, artworks on display at More than Meets the Eye include an untitled 1978 painting by Abdulhalim Radwi; Ahmed Mater’s Cowboy Code is a nod to Western films; Muhannad Shono’s Letters in Light (Lines We Write)

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