UAE IN THE FRAME AS MIDDLE EAST ART MARKET BLOSSOMS
Arrival of local, regional and international companies and galleries has established a global and strengthening market for Middle East art. Samuel McIlhagga reports
Louvre Abu Dhabi, opened in 2017, has already attracted more than a million visitors in its first year
For some years, the market for contemporary and modern Middle East art was described as “emerging”, but now the UAE is leading the way as the region becomes firmly established in the international market, both commercially and culturally.
“The geographical area that has come on strongly has been the [Arabian] Gulf. It’s a dominant force in the market today and you see that in the high prices paid for Islamic manuscripts, both religious and secular, works on science and mathematics, and more decorative materials such as glass and ceramics, which has a broad appeal and is collected by a diverse array of buyers,” Edward Gibbs, the former chairman of London auction house Sotheby’s in the Middle East and India, tells The National.
One of the first global names to arrive here was Christie’s, also based in London, which held its first sale in Dubai in 2006. Among the lots on offer was the Iraqi modernist Shakir Hassan Al Said’s The Peasant, which sold for $31,200 (Dh114,600).
Sotheby’s set up its first outpost in Doha in 2008, before moving to Dubai International Financial Centre in 2017.
Both Christie’s and Sotheby’s have seen a decade of international success.
They thrived during the initial boom of the 2000s, weathered global economic instability during the late 2000s and have now consolidated their presence in the UAE as 2019 approaches.
In this region, following a slide in profits during 20112012, there has been a significant rebound. For Christie’s – from modern and contemporary art alone – sales hit more than $8m by October, and for Sotheby’s the figure was $14.9m.
The growth of the Middle East art market has encouraged the establishment of larger, less commercial cultural institutions that bridge the gap between a booming and increasingly diverse UAE and the West.
Louvre Abu Dhabi, opened in 2017, has already attracted more than a million visitors in its first year, The National reported in November – a figure that puts it among the top 70 museums worldwide to reach that level of audience, and certainly the only one in the region.
Also this year, the art world witnessed the foundation of the Sheikh Zayed Gallery at the British Museum in London and the opening of the cutting-edge Jameel Arts Centre in Dubai, headed by the British director Antonia Carver, who was previously the director of the Art Dubai fair. In May last year, she told
Harpers Bazaar magazine the growth of the art scene in the UAE “has been organic in nature and driven by a series of such dedicated and passionate individuals, working across the commercial and non-commercial sector”.
Ms Carver also pointed to what she referred to as the “leadership roles played by Sharjah Art Foundation, Art Dubai, Saadiyat Island and the Sheikha Salama Foundation”.
The establishment of international, public-facing institutions is strengthening the Middle East art market further. According to Deloitte’s
Art & Finance Report 2017, the market is predicted to grow in worth (held in collections) by up to $53.6 billion by 2026 from $86.4bn in 2016.
While the region’s market worth is not predicted to grow at quite the rate of East Asia – at 8 per cent to 2026 – it should make up 5.2 per cent of the global total, Deloitte said.
“I think what happened, especially post-2008 after the financial crisis, [was that] there was a closer examination of artists and I think the [Middle East] market really matured then … The market is now far more sustainable, it’s rising at a much more gradual pace,” says Michael Jeha, managing director at Christie’s Middle East.
Anders Patterson, the chief executive of Art Tactic, an art market research firm based in London, concurs: “The Middle East art market is slowly maturing, with more museum institutions, more galleries and other art platforms emerging in recent years.”
However, he points out that the market is susceptible to geopolitical risks in parts of the region, such as Iran. “The news that the Trump administration has unleashed its toughest ever sanctions against Iran last month, raises questions about the sustainability of the Iranian domestic art market going forward,” says Mr Patterson.
Sotheby’s Mr Gibbs says that while the more recent arrival of the big players has intensified attention on the Middle East, there has long been interest here.
“The [classical Islamic] auction market started in the 1970s” he says, adding, “the Kuwait National Museum was the first Gulf gallery to open in the 1980s. It was torched and looted during the First Gulf War by Iraqi troops and its contents were emptied and carried back in trucks to Baghdad; before being rescued by a Unesco team.
“That museum began the collecting trend … maturing into establishments like Louvre in Abu Dhabi.”
Ashkan Baghestani, head of sales, contemporary and Islamic art at Sotheby’s, says there was some concern among aficionados regarding the regional art scene this year but “it actually ended up being a very, very, good year [so far]”.
That continues what has been a growing trend, he says.
“We have some good numbers from business intelligence where over the past five years we sold $180m of Islamic and Middle Eastern art, with about 1,200 clients across the world,” he says.
This was, says Mr Gibbs, because of “a lot of cross-fertilisation and cross-marketing across our client base, and a