Red Sea Film Fest invites movie makers to push limits in 48Hr Film Challenge

Filmmaker Dhafer L’Abdine will head up the jury. (AFP)
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Updated 08 June 2022
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Red Sea Film Fest invites movie makers to push limits in 48Hr Film Challenge

DUBAI: The 48Hr Film Challenge is back — the follow up iteration of the competition was announced on Wednesday by the Red Sea International Film Festival and movie makers in Saudi Arabia are gearing up to take part.

The short film competition, launched in 2020, is set to support local filmmakers while challenging them as they write, shoot and edit their creations in just two days.

The competition is a collaboration between the Alliance Française, the Consulate General of France in Jeddah, the French Embassy in Riyadh, the Red Sea International Film Festival, and La Fémis.

It will include three days of mentorship once through the selection process, followed by an intensive 48 hours where the selected teams will create their films while working around a set theme and incorporating surprise elements.

The shortlisted teams will be selected by a jury composed of award-winning actor and Head of Jury Dhafer L’Abdine, renowned filmmaker and journalist Wael Abu Mansour and Claude Mourieras, award winning French film director and screenwriter.

 “The Saudi film industry gave us a glimpse of its potential with the vast variety of Saudi-made films that premiered in the first edition of the Red Sea International Film Festival. We are merely scratching the surface, but competitions and programs like the 48Hr Film Challenge help us to seek out and uncover the untapped talent that is clearly prevalent in the Saudi film community and equip them with the knowledge and experience to create their own work,” said L’Abdine. “I have high hopes for the next generation of Saudi filmmakers, and I’m very excited to see what they accomplish.”

Teams must be between 2-5 participants and aged between 18-25 years old. Those selected from the applicants will enjoy three days of workshops, which will equip them with the knowledge and expertise to develop their film, from idea to final cut.

Jury screening will take place in November, where the jury will award the two winning teams with a trophy designed by artist Rabi Alakhras. Additionally, winning team leaders will go on to participate in a tailored educational residency program with renowned French cinematographers in 2023.


New auction record for a Saudi artist set at Sotheby's sale in Riyadh

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New auction record for a Saudi artist set at Sotheby's sale in Riyadh

DUBAI: Sotheby’s returned to Saudi Arabia on Saturday night with its second auction in the Kingdom, drawing a full house to an open-air amphitheater in Diriyah and setting a new auction record for a Saudi artist.

The sale, titled “Origins II,” took place nearly one year after Sotheby’s staged the first-ever international auction in Saudi Arabia.

The auction’s standout moment came early, when Safeya Binzagr’s “Coffee Shop on Madina Road”

sold for $2.1 million — more than ten times its high estimate of $200,000. The result nearly doubled the previous auction record for a Saudi artist and became the most valuable artwork ever sold at auction in the Kingdom. It also ranks as the third-highest price achieved for an Arab artist at auction.

Held in Diriyah, the birthplace of the Saudi state and home to the UNESCO World Heritage site of At-Turaif, the event followed a week-long public exhibition at Bujairi Terrace that drew about 4,500 visitors. Collectors from more than 40 countries participated in the auction, with one-third of the lots sold to buyers based in Saudi Arabia.

The sale achieved a total of $19.6 million, exceeding its pre-sale estimate and bringing the combined value of works offered across Origins and Origins II to more than $32 million.

All nine works by Saudi artists offered in the sale found buyers, generating a combined $4.3 million. Additional auction records were set for Egyptian artist Ahmed Morsi and Sudanese artist Abdel Badie Abdel Hay.

An untitled work from 1989 by Mohammed Al-Saleem sold for a triple estimate $756,000, while a second work by the artist, “Flow” from 1987, achieved $630,000.

The sale opened with the auction debut of Mohamed Siam, whose “Untitled (Camel Race)” sold for $94,500. Also making his first auction appearance, Dia Aziz Dia’s prize-winning “La Palma (The Palma)” achieved $226,800.

International highlights included works by Pablo Picasso, Roy Lichtenstein, Andy Warhol and Anish Kapoor, underscoring Saudi Arabia’s growing role as a destination for major global art events and collectors.

Pablo Picasso’s “Paysage,” painted during the final decade of the artist’s life, sold for $1,600,000, becoming the second most valuable artwork sold at auction in Saudi Arabia.

Seven works by Roy Lichtenstein from the personal collection of Dorothy and Roy Lichtenstein, including collages, prints, works on paper and sculptures, all found buyers. Andy Warhol was represented in the sale with two works: “Disquieting Muses (After de Chirico),” which sold for $1,033,200,  and a complete set of four screenprints of “Muhammad Ali,” which achieved $352,000.