Saudi highlights from Christie’s Middle Eastern & Contemporary Art sale 

Saudi highlights from Christie’s Middle Eastern & Contemporary Art sale 
Moath Alofi, ‘The Last Tashahud.’ (Supplied) 
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Updated 02 May 2025

Saudi highlights from Christie’s Middle Eastern & Contemporary Art sale 

Saudi highlights from Christie’s Middle Eastern & Contemporary Art sale 
  • Twelve artists from the Kingdom feature in the online auction, which closes May 8 

Ahmed Mater 

‘Illumination X-Ray’ 

The latest Middle Eastern & Contemporary Art sale from the storied auction house Christie’s features works by 12 Saudi artists — highlighted in a “Saudi Now” section on the auction site, which Christie’s describes as “a carefully selected group of works by Saudi artists that trace the unique history of the Kingdom’s artistic evolution; from the development of a modernist language deeply enmeshed in the country’s cultural heritage, to innovative contemporary works that challenge perceptions of what Saudi art is and can be.” 

Mater, a qualified doctor, is perhaps the most famous of the artists contributing to the latter group. His work, Nour Kelani — Christie’s managing director, — wrote in an email to Arab News, “explores history and the narratives and aesthetics of Islamic culture, and continues to receive much-deserved growing regional and international acclaim.”  

The ‘Illumination’ series to which this diptych belongs, she continues “brings together traditional Islamic art and modern medicine — two subjects that are often treated as essentially separate and full of tense contradictions.” 

  Abdulhalim Radwi  

‘P𲹳’ 

Kelani says Radwi is “one of ’s most respected Modernist artists.” Indeed, he is often considered the ‘father’ of modern Saudi art. He was one of the first Saudi artists to study overseas, earning his BA in Rome in the Sixties and living for a time in Madrid in the Seventies. His work, Kelani notes, “draws references to ’s desert life, folklore and traditional architecture” and although Radwi was born in Makkah, he is most strongly associated with Jeddah, where he spent much of his adult life.  

This piece is one of Radwi’s later works, created in 2002, just four years before he died. It is expected to fetch between $20-30,000 at auction. 

Faisal Samra 

‘Performance #13’ 

The Saudi-Bahraini artist is “considered a pioneer of conceptual art in the Middle East,” says Kelani. “He incorporates digital photography and performance into a creative repertoire of work.” This piece comes from his “Distorted Reality” series, which features covered individuals in blurred motion. “I don’t like still water; I like it to be moving,” Samra told Arab News last year. “I’m exploring to find something different. The core of my research is man’s existence in our world, and how we react to it, and how the world reacts to him.” 

 įJowhara AlSaud 

‘He Said, She Said’ 

The Saudi-born artist “manipulates her photographs with drawing and etching in a process that explores both the impressionability of her medium and the cultural landscape around her, exploring … censorship,” Kelani explains. This work, created in 2009, is a prime example — the lack of facial features and the blurred lines are all conscious depictions of acts of self-censorship on the part of the artist. 

Ayman Yossri Daydban 

‘Kunna Jameean Ekhwa’ 

Daydban is a Saudi-Palestinian artist whose work, says Kelani, “is both biographical and a commentary on the environment he grew up in.” This piece, described by Kelani as “iconic,” is from “Subtitles,” a series in which he selects stills from subtitled movies so the text — now decontextualized — is open to our own interpretations. Here, the text reads “We were brothers once.” 

Moath Alofi 

‘The Last Tashahud’ 

This work is one of a series of images in Alofi’s series of photographs that, according to Alofi’s website, “captures desolated mosques scattered along the winding roads leading to the holy city of Madinah.” These mosques, the text continues, were “built by philanthropists hoping to offer a haven for travelers, both of whom seek to reap the sacramental rewards of these structures.” 

  Nasser Al-Salem 

‘God is Alive, He Shall Not Die’ 

Al-Salem, Kelani says, “is a contemporary calligrapher whose work redefines Arabic calligraphy, challenging the boundaries of the traditional Islamic art by recontextualizing it in unconventional mixed-media forms.” Forms such as this one, for example, in which the word “Allah” is presented in neon above a mirror, thus repeating. 


REVIEW: ‘Ballad of a Small Player’ — a stylish thriller lacking in substance

REVIEW: ‘Ballad of a Small Player’ — a stylish thriller lacking in substance
Updated 07 November 2025

REVIEW: ‘Ballad of a Small Player’ — a stylish thriller lacking in substance

REVIEW: ‘Ballad of a Small Player’ — a stylish thriller lacking in substance

DUBAI: German filmmaker Edward Berger’s 2022 take on “All Quiet on the Western Front” was a masterpiece, and his English-language debut, last year’s “Conclave,” was a nuanced, smart political thriller. There’s no doubting his talent.

However, “Ballad of a Small Player” is not on that level. While it’s a visual delight, reminiscent of Wes Anderson’s vividly realized worlds. But the unusual stylistic choices often seem forced — art for art’s sake. It’s not helped by Rowan Joffé’s screenplay, which fails to build on initial intrigue and ends up feeling thrown together.

Colin Farrell plays disgraced Irish financier Brendan Reilly, who’s fled the UK for Macau having stolen the life savings of a wealthy old woman who had invested with his firm. In Macau, Reilly has reinvented himself as Lord Doyle — an aristocratic playboy hoping that his apparent wealth and upper-class upbringing (neither of which Reilly actually possesses) will be enough to fool creditors into funding his gambling habit. And his drinking.

Farrell is convincing as a fraudster adrift in the luxurious loneliness of five-star suites — a man who clearly wants to try and be ‘good,’ but whose moral failings and lack of self-control (and self-awareness) keep sabotaging his attempts. As his debts mount, he meets Dao Ming, a credit broker with her own issues (and debts). When one of her clients commits suicide, Reilly comforts her, and promises that when his fortunes change, he will clear her debts too.

But his losing streak continues, and he is found by investigator Cynthia Blithe (Tilda Swinton), who has been contracted by his former employers and gives him 24 hours to repay the funds he embezzled.

As Reilly spirals further into despair and stress he has a heart attack. As he loses consciousness, he sees Dao approach him, smiling. He wakes up in Dao’s house, where she nurses him back to health and they share their most intimate secrets. 

Reilly’s fortunes then turn around dramatically, resulting in an improbable winning streak at the baccarat tables. And then the opportunity to completely change his life, and Dao’s, by staking it all on a single hand.

Berger builds the tension and claustrophobia of Reilly’s world well at first, but he’s the only character close to fully developed. Dao’s intriguing persona is wasted, and the gifted Swinton’s role is too cartoonish to convince. Ultimately, the movie fails to deliver on its promising first impressions.