3 highlights from the UAE’s ‘In The Heart of Another Country’ show

‘Sailing Boats,’ Lionel Wendt. (Photo by Shafeek Nalakath Kareem - courtesy of Sharjah Art Foundation)
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Updated 02 August 2023
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3 highlights from the UAE’s ‘In The Heart of Another Country’ show

DUBAI: Here are three highlights from ‘In The Heart of Another Country,’  which runs until Sept. 24 at Al-Mureijah Art Spaces in Sharjah, UAE.

‘Mount Tamalpaïs’  




Photo by Danko Stjepanovic - courtesy of Sharjah Art Foundation

Etel Adnan 

The full title of this show is “In The Heart of Another Country The Diasporic Imagination Rises.” It features works from dozens of Asian and Arab artists, dating from 1935 to the present day. “What unites these myriad artworks, and their makers, is the emirate of Sharjah,” the brochure states, “which has historically served as a site of encounter and exchange amongst artists and intellectuals.” Adnan’s 2015 work was commissioned by Sharjah Art Foundation. 

‘Untitled 7’ 




Photo by Shafeek Nalakath Kareem - courtesy of Sharjah Art Foundation

Ibrahim Massouda 

The exhibition, the brochure says, “examines the increasingly mutable notion of home” and “charts sentiments of longing, memorial and homecoming through … artworks that unfold across borders, both real and imagined.” Massouda, who painted this work in the early 1950s, was part of the Egyptian Surrealist group.   

‘Sailing Boats’ 




Photo by Shafeek Nalakath Kareem - courtesy of Sharjah Art Foundation

Lionel Wendt 

The show, drawn from the foundation’s public collection, was originally on display in Hamburg last year. This sequel was “conceived as a homecoming — a restorative act of resuscitation.” This piece is by a pioneering Sri Lankan photographer who, in the first half of the 20th century, experimented with a number of different techniques, including collage and solarization.  


Sotheby’s to bring coveted Rembrandt lion drawing to Diriyah

Updated 18 January 2026
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Sotheby’s to bring coveted Rembrandt lion drawing to Diriyah

DUBAI: Later this month, Sotheby’s will bring to Saudi Arabia what it describes as the most important Rembrandt drawing to appear at auction in 50 years. Estimated at $15–20 million, “Young Lion Resting” comes to market from The Leiden Collection, one of the world’s most important private collections of 17th-century Dutch and Flemish art.

The drawing will be on public view at Diriyah’s Bujairi Terrace from Jan. 24 to 25, alongside the full contents of “Origins II” — Sotheby’s forthcoming second auction in Saudi Arabia — ahead of its offering at Sotheby’s New York on Feb. 4, 2026. The entire proceeds from the sale will benefit Panthera, the world’s leading organization dedicated to the conservation of wild cats. The work is being sold by The Leiden Collection in partnership with its co-owner, philanthropist Jon Ayers, the chairman of the board of Panthera.

Established in 2006, Panthera was founded by the late wildlife biologist Dr. Alan Rabinowitz and Dr. Thomas S. Kaplan. The organization is actively engaged in the Middle East, where it is spearheading the reintroduction of the critically endangered Arabian leopard to AlUla, in partnership with the Royal Commission for AlUla.

“Young Lion Resting” is one of only six known Rembrandt drawings of lions and the only example remaining in private hands. Executed when Rembrandt was in his early to mid-thirties, the work captures the animal’s power and restless energy with striking immediacy, suggesting it was drawn from life. Long before Rembrandt sketched a lion in 17th-century Europe, lions roamed northwest Arabia, their presence still echoed in AlUla’s ancient rock carvings and the Lion Tombs of Dadan.

For Dr. Kaplan, the drawing holds personal significance as his first Rembrandt acquisition. From 2017 to 2024, he served as chairman of the International Alliance for the Protection of Heritage, of which Saudi Arabia is a founding member.

The Diriyah exhibition will also present, for the first time, the full range of works offered in “Origins II,” a 64-lot sale of modern and contemporary art, culminating in an open-air auction on Jan. 31 at 7.30 pm.