DJ Peggy Gou makes waves in the Middle East, eyes collaborations with Arab artists

Peggy Gou performed in Abu Dhabi this week. (Supplied)
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Updated 02 May 2024
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DJ Peggy Gou makes waves in the Middle East, eyes collaborations with Arab artists

ABU DHABI: South Korean DJ and singer Peggy Gou is no stranger to the Middle East. She wowed fans this week at the Louvre Abu Dhabi in the UAE, performing in celebration of the newly opened exhibition “From Kalila wa Dimna to La Fontaine: Travelling through Fables,” and revealed that she would consider collaborating with Arab artists.




She performed in celebration of the newly opened exhibition “From Kalila wa Dimna to La Fontaine: Travelling through Fables.” (Supplied)

She told Arab News the morning after the event: “I woke up this morning and was thinking what happened last night. It is one of those events that is so meaningful. I’ve been to Abu Dhabi twice just to see the exhibitions. It’s more than a museum to me. It is a community, where people even go to hang out. That’s how beautiful that place is.”

Gou was among the first performers to take the stage at the Louvre Abu Dhabi in front of an audience, she said.

“I know David Guetta did it once before without an audience during COVID-19 … It was my first time playing in Abu Dhabi. It was insane. It was a very, very special night, and I want to do more,” she added. 




Gou was among the first performers to take the stage at the Louvre Abu Dhabi in front of an audience, she said. (Supplied)

Gou incorporates Arab-inspired music into her performances, noting that “people just love it, and they love percussion.”

To the artist, music is like a feeling. “It is really hard to rationalize it,” she said. “When you love it, you just love it,” she added, expressing her admiration for Arab melodies.

“This is maybe the reason why people support my music, even though they don’t understand the language. Sometimes they just feel it, they just love it,” she explained. 

“I love our music, but at the same time, I’m considering collaborating with an Arab artist because there are a lot of talented Arab musicians here,” she said. “I have many friends here who recommended me some artists, and I want to check it out.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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“I never say no. I love making music with different languages.” 

Gou has performed in Saudi Arabia multiple times.

“Every time I go there, it’s different. But what I can say is it’s always changing in a good way. In the very beginning, I felt like they weren’t going to understand my music,” she recalled.

But the DJ said that her last performance in AlUla was one of her favorites. “People were just shouting, screaming, and dancing as if there was no tomorrow,” she said.


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

Updated 50 min 38 sec ago
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New auction record for a Saudi artist set at Sotheby’s sale in Riyadh

RIYADH: 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.