Athr Gallery takes Saudi artworks to Frieze London fair

'I Loved You Once - Sound Scape No 2' by Sara Abdu. (Supplied)
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Updated 11 October 2024
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Athr Gallery takes Saudi artworks to Frieze London fair

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s Athr Gallery — which has branches in Jeddah, AlUla and Riyadh — is once again displaying the works of several Saudi artists at London’s prestigious Frieze art fair, which began Oct. 9 and runs until Oct. 13. 

This year’s Athr lineup includes works by Nasser Al-Salem, Dana Awartani, Sara Abdu and Ayman Daydban. The exhibition is called “Nafs,” meaning “self” or “psyche” and, according to the gallery, it “challenges existing conventions and fosters dialogue on Islamic artistic identity” and “redefines traditional Islamic art forms to offer a deeper understanding of the self, society and the human ego.” 

Nasser Al-Salem 

The 39-year-old is an architect, calligrapher and artist. For his two works for Frieze — “Math + Metal” (pictured) and “Metal Civilization” — Al-Salem combined all three to create minimalist sculptures that, according to Athr, “redefine Islamic calligraphy by infusing modernity with traditional phrases.” The calligraphy isn’t immediately comprehensible, due to Al-Salem’s conceptual approach to Arabic writing. But that shouldn’t lead you to think Al-Salem does not respect traditional calligraphy. As he explained to Arab News in 2019, he began as a classical calligrapher. It wasn’t until he travelled abroad that he decided he wanted to create work that could “coexist within the realm of contemporary art.” 

He continued: “I was asking myself the question that most calligraphers today ask themselves: How can we evolve from such an ancient and traditional art form?” At Frieze, Al-Salem offers a couple of answers to that question. 




'Math and Metal' by Nasser Al-Salem. (Supplied)

Dana Awartani 

The Saudi-born artist, who is of Palestinian descent, contributes sculptures from her “Platonic Solids Duals” series, created between 2016 and 2018, including this piece, “Dodecahedron Within an Icosahedron II.” The series showcases Awartani’s fascination with sacred geometry, which, she explained to Arab News earlier this year, she sees as a way to “understand the world from a different perspective by seeing harmony in nature and the cosmos through the lens of geometry and numbers.”    

“‘Nafs’ is an idea of self and ego,” Athr curator Daria Kirsanova told The New York Times in an interview last week. “Dana’s cube within a cube shows how you approach the multitudes of your own spirituality.” 




'Dodechahedron Within an Icosahedron II' by Dana Awartani. (Supplied)

Ayman Daydban 

Daydban’s “The Line” is a continuation of the project he conceived for this year’s Desert X AlUla when he created a rock garden in the shape of a full-size soccer field. When he was modifying the piece for a gallery show, he turned it into a series of 15 paintings that depict the markings of a soccer pitch. However, instead of laying it out correctly, he allowed a young boy visiting the gallery with his family to arrange them, which the kid did in a random way. “It shows the ideas that borders don’t appear for … a child,” Daydban told the NYT. “It speaks to the idea that seemingly random people can dictate borders.”  




'The Line' by Ayman Daydban. (Supplied)

Sara Abdu 

The Saudi-born Yemeni artist has, for many years, centered her practice around the theme of memory “and its role in forming identities and constructing our interior and exterior reality,” she told Arab News in 2021. At Frieze, she is presenting a series called “I Loved You Once,” which features works that she created by embroidering human hair on fabric, “promoting introspection and transcendence,” according to Athr Gallery. She chose to work with hair, she told the NYT, because it “symbolizes time or resistance to the idea of the fading of memories and the ending of a life cycle.” 




'I Loved You Once - Sound Scape No 2' by Sara Abdu. (Supplied)

 


Review: ‘A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms’ is an oddball comedy worthy of Westeros

Updated 19 January 2026
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Review: ‘A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms’ is an oddball comedy worthy of Westeros

DUBAI: At a time when the sprawling saga of “Game of Thrones” and its prequel “House of the Dragon” have come to define modern fantasy television, “A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms” emerges as an unexpected offering.

Based on George R.R. Martin’s “Tales of Dunk and Egg” novellas, the six-episode HBO series — created and spearheaded by showrunner Ira Parker alongside Martin — gives viewers a story that is not about dragons or imperial politics, but about two unlikely companions navigating a treacherous and unforgiving world from its humbler margins.

From the opening moments of the premiere, where the familiar “Game of Thrones” theme music is undercut in a moment of shocking levity, the show makes clear that we are far away from the grand halls of Casterly Rock, the Red Keep or even Winterfell. Grounded and whimsical, this is Westeros viewed from muddy inns, dusty roads and makeshift jousting camps.

Peter Claffey as Ser Duncan “Dunk” the Tall is the beating heart of the series. Claffey imbues Dunk with an endearing earnestness — a towering, awkward figure, constantly walking into doors, whose moral compass is as unwavering as his endless appetite.

His chemistry with Dexter Sol Ansell’s young squire, Egg, who has deep secrets of his own, is warm and organic, creating a duo that is as compelling as any knight and squire of fantasy lore. Their dynamic gives the story a cozy, almost heartfelt buddy-adventure quality.

What makes “A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms” so captivating isn’t its lack of spectacle. It has plenty of Westerosi trappings and there’s a sizeable helping of Targaryens and Baratheons and who have you. But its choice to focus on everyday courage, loyalty and the messy, funny, sometimes mundane reality of being a hedge knight truly makes this a worthy addition to the “Game of Thrones” screen universe. We hope there’s more where that came from.