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Artist Samir Rafi’s surrealist world on show in Dubai

- Dubai Arab News Dubai AFP Green Art Gallery

US model and social media darling Chrissy Teigen wore a dreamy gown by Dubaibased fashion house Maison Yeya to the Critics’ Choice Awards in Los Angeles on Sunday night.

The autumn/winter 2018 dress was designed by the label’s Egyptian founder, Yasmine Yeya, and features a thigh-high split, gorgeous sweetheart neckline and a waist-cinching belt.

Chosen for Teigen by celebrity stylist Monica Rose, the silver-grey gown was also worn by superstar Nicole Scherzinge­r when she performed at an event in Dubai last year.

Teigen took the look to new heights with Stuart Weitzman sandals and Jaipur Jewels diamond earrings.

The awards show saw Alfonso Cuaron’s “Roma” — an ode to the director’s childhood in 1970s Mexico City — named as the big winner of the night.

“Roma” won trophies for best picture, best foreign-language film, and for both director and cinematogr­aphy for Cuaron, AFP reported.

“This bunch of Mexicans are not as bad as sometimes they are portrayed,” said Cuaron said, a reference to President Donald Trump’s hard-line rhetoric on immigratio­n.

Shot in black and white, and filmed in Spanish and the indigenous Mixtec language, “Roma” is a semi-autobiogra­phical chronicle of a year in the life of Cuaron’s family and his childhood nanny.

“Roma” — the title a reference to a posh Mexico City neighborho­od — earlier won two Golden Globes and is a leading contender for an Oscar at the Academy Awards ceremony in February. Dubai’s Green Art Gallery just unveiled a spotlight exhibition on the surrealism-inspired Egyptian artist Samir Rafi.

Rafi, who died in Paris in 2004, began his journey into the world of art at the age of 14, when he became a student of the Egyptian watercolor­ist Shafiq Rizk and later went on to study with masters Mohammed Nagi and Ragheb Ayad.

He was quickly recognized for his talent and, at the tender age of 17, had his first- ever exhibition, organized by the artist and educator Hussein Youssef Amin.

By 1948, Rafi, who had just finished his bachelor’s degree in Cairo, he had solidified his place as a member of the Contempora­ry Art Group, which was best known for its uncensored portrayal of Egyptian society.

“The spirit of those times and the internatio­nal current of surrealism defined his perspectiv­e as an artist and left an indelible mark on his life’s work,” the Green Art Gallery noted in a released statement, adding that between 1945 and 1953, Rafi’s exhibition­s in Cairo made him a constant fixture of the local art community.

“In this vibrant post-WWII era of political, intellectu­al and cultural change, his fearless melding of a variety of local and Western influences, and his confident representa­tion of society’s most marginaliz­ed elements, were among the qualities that allowed to him to stand out among other young Egyptian artists,” the gallery added.

The artist left Egypt to study in France in 1954 and went on to engage in rigorous experiment­ation with different techniques and styles, helped along by working relationsh­ips with the likes of Le Corbusier and Picasso.

Rafi’s works are on show at the Green Art Gallery in Dubai’s artsy Alserkal Avenue area until March 5 and include his distinct artistic observatio­ns of loneliness, despair and homesickne­ss.

Perhaps best known for his trademark imagery of the female form and wolf dog, Rafi’s work almost always employs symbols extracted from his love of nature and his Egyptian childhood and that is immediatel­y visible in the collection of work on show in Dubai.

The works on display span 50 years and showcase the artist’s mastery of lines and shade, his command of color and how he combined those techniques to create a unique surrealist world within his frames.

 ?? A piece by Egyptian artist Samir Rafi. ??
A piece by Egyptian artist Samir Rafi.

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