Arab News

Dalya Moumina: ‘Jeddah is always going to be home to me’

The NYC-based Saudi Filipina artist discusses growing up in the Kingdom and how her cultural background has influenced her work

- Rawaa Talass Dubai

Dalya Moumina is an emerging New York-based artist whose imaginativ­e landscape paintings partially pay tribute to her Arab and Asian heritage. She was born in Washington, DC in 1996 to a Saudi Palestinia­n father and a Filipina mother.

Both were travel lovers, who luckily happened to have met each other on a flight. When Moumina was three years old, her family relocated to Saudi Arabia.

“Jeddah is always going to be home to me. Whenever I go back, it feels like I never left,” Moumina tells Arab News. “Growing up there was very adventurou­s. I lived the Jeddah lifestyle, right on the Red Sea, which was the best childhood to be honest. I’d go to the beach almost every weekend and we would do desert trips and hiking. I was also a profession­al horseback rider. I think the part of Jeddah that most influences me is definitely the water. The Red Sea is, in my opinion, the most beautiful sea out there. It’s so blue.”

She also has a special connection with the Philippine­s, which she visited every summer when growing up. “I’d see my mother’s side of the family and my cousins. The people are so kind-hearted. We would go to the islands there, like Boracay and Palawan.

They’re absolutely stunning,” she says. “I think I try to bring those influences into my work, especially the tribal communitie­s there. For example, in ceremonies, they’re very into face painting primitive shapes that symbolize different things.”

Those childhood memories have seeped into the bold utopian landscape imagery that Moumina started creating in 2019.

“We have volcanoes and beautiful islands in the Philippine­s. I think that growing up around those extreme and contrastin­g landscapes led me to amalgamate them into my work, because the meandering rivers and labyrinthi­ne terrains there are unlike any other place, in my opinion, contrastin­g with the desert landscapes in Saudi Arabia,” she explains.

Although she doesn’t come from an artistic family, Moumina always found herself making collages, scrapbooki­ng and drawing. “I’ve been painting my whole life. I never took it seriously, but I think it was always an innate part of me,” she says. She also had an aunt who drew and she encouraged her niece. During high school, Moumina took art classes and actually sold her first artwork at a school exhibition. She later attended the University of Virginia to study business, technology and psychology (along with a few art classes). It was in Virginia she discovered the work of American master Georgia O’Keeffe, who famously depicted the mountainou­s landscapes of the US. “She used to teach at my university, and she’s such a big inspiratio­n in my work,” says Moumina. “I would say that our styles are similar, but, obviously, I’m trying “I really missed traveling, so I to distinguis­h myself.” was thinking of the landscapes In 2019, Moumina graduated, and the ocean from Saudi and but a few months later the the feeling of being by the COVID-19 pandemic hit. She beach,” she says. “I’ve always started painting again during the loved using oil paint, because ensuing lockdowns. it’s slow-drying and the colors are so rich. It’s very therapeuti­c and relaxing. Sometimes, I’ll play melodic music, other times I’ll work in silence. Whenever I start painting, I just go into a flow state of mind and work for hours — forgetting to eat. You don’t even realize it.”

Moumina’s arresting landscapes feel otherworld­ly, isolated and fantasy-like. At times, a large yellow sun dominates the compositio­n, above wave-like mountains and flowing rivers. Inspired by cubism and surrealism, Moumina executes her paintings * in three-dimensions, with sharp contrasts and bold colors.

“Each piece, I’d say, has a distinctiv­e energy and character,” she says. “I don’t want people to just look at the work, I want them to feel something and walk away thinking about it more, and thinking something new. I try to lure people in through the energizing presence of fresh possibilit­ies ... I hope people see, through my work, that everything is simply interconne­cted and interactiv­e.”

Along with the vivid colors and energy in Moumina’s work, there is also a sense of somberness. “There’s so much happening in the world,” she says. “I think of my grandmothe­r, who was Palestinia­n. She was evicted from her home back in the Forties, and I made a painting that was inspired by her. Because I live all the way in New York, it’s kind of hard to keep in touch with what’s happening in the Middle East.” Moumina has been living in New York — which she describes as

“the art capital of the world” — for two years, and she is represente­d by GR Gallery. On May 3, a group show, “Transfigur­ation,” opened at the gallery. The show includes a selection of Moumina’s nature pieces. She says that being an artist in a well-establishe­d art scene like New York is competitiv­e, and that she has considered doing a Master’s degree in art, but she realized that she needed something more in order to succeed.

“What helps you in this industry is networking and not staying in your studio 24/7,” says Moumina, who describes herself as sociable and extroverte­d. “Half of it is also connecting with other artists and really putting yourself out there.” She also believes that being both Saudi and a woman has been an advantage so far in her career. “I think it’s still a maledomina­ted field,” she says. “But a lot of gallery owners are trying to bring up more female artists, because that’s what’s kind of in demand nowadays.”

I don’t want people to just look at the work, I want them to feel something and walk away thinking something new.

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 ?? Supplied ?? (Top) Dalya Moumina. (Above) Moumina’s ‘Tempestuou­s Reverie.’
Supplied (Top) Dalya Moumina. (Above) Moumina’s ‘Tempestuou­s Reverie.’
 ?? Supplied ?? (Left) Dalya Moumina’s work ‘Harmony Rising.’
Supplied (Left) Dalya Moumina’s work ‘Harmony Rising.’

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