The last time Steven Naifeh’s work was exhibited in Abu Dhabi, there were no art galleries in the city and Saadiyat Island was the site of an experimental hydroponic farm.
The two-day show, which was held at the Embassy of the United States in August 1975, featured 15 works, including paintings and sculptures made from white Formica, influenced by the work of contemporary abstract artists such as Frank Stella and the British op artist Bridget Riley.
The works were created by Naifeh while he was staying in Abu Dhabi with his parents. Naifeh’s father George worked as first secretary for cultural affairs at the American embassy and his mother taught English at a local Emirati girls’ school. Their apartment, which stood facing the sea on Abu Dhabi’s Corniche, served as the 25-year-old’s studio.
The local English language newspaper at of the time, the UAE News, gave the one-man-show a glowing review under the title “American Arab’s Exhibition of Paintings and Sculptures”. “I cannot wait to see more of his work and have a strong suspicion that in 10 years or so anyone who was lucky enough to have seen this exhibition will be boasting,” wrote the reviewer, Barbara Hughes. “Let us hope that we shall see his work in public buildings here in Abu Dhabi as well as in the homes of private collectors.”
At the time, it would have been impossible to guess at the circumstances surrounding Naifeh’s return, but the artist’s life and the reviewer’s prediction have come together in ways that now seem uncanny.
For the first time in 39 years, public and private collectors visiting Abu Dhabi Art will have the opportunity to appreciate Naifeh’s work on UAE soil.
Not only are the works being exhibited in a gallery built near the site of Saadiyat Island’s former greenhouses, but the capital now has its own international art fair and will soon have a Louvre and a Guggenheim, part of whose permanent collection is about to be seen in the capital for the very first time.
If the capital is unrecognisable from the city where Naifeh spent his university holidays, the man also returns transformed.
In 1975 Naifeh was still a student, considering a future in either law or the arts. Not only did his career develop to span both fields, but Naifeh is now an internationally recognised and exhibited artist, a Pulitzer Prize-winning biographer and a significant collector and patron of the arts in his own right.
“I can’t wait to see the city again because it must be a completely different place,” the 62-year-old explains. “This will be the first time I’ve been in Abu Dhabi since that first exhibition.”
Naifeh now describes his earlier work as “derivative” and “juvenile” but admits that in many ways his artistic concerns, which involve a desire to explore the “kinship” between the traditions of Islamic geometry and those of 20th-century western abstraction, have remained constant throughout his career.
Even at his first Abu Dhabi exhibition, Naifeh made these connections, exhibiting his abstract sculptures and paintings alongside two volumes of a reprinted 19th-century French text, L’Art Arabe.
“These two fields of art are incredibly important to me [and I hope to] marry them in a way that will allow the average viewer to look at them and, without being steeped in the art history of either movement, see them without seeing them as either medieval Islamic or recent international, but as both at the same time.”
Naifeh ascribes these aesthetic preoccupations to his education, his upbringing and his background. An Arab-American whose grandparents were born in a part of Syria that is now Lebanon and Jordan, Naifeh was born in Iran and grew up in both America and the Middle East thanks to his father’s career as a diplomat.
Before he first came to Abu Dhabi in 1974, the young Naifeh spent time in Oman, Jordan, Iraq, Pakistan and Nigeria. It was as a 15-year-old, living in Lagos, that Naifeh studied painting with Bruce Onobrakpeya, one of the leading Nigerian artists of the 20th century, but it was as a 10-year-old, living in Libya, that he first started to realise his passion for art. “I was a very odd kid,” Naifeh explains. “Unlike most kids, who want whatever 10-year-olds want, I wanted a Roman head. We lived in Libya and they were available and for $25, my parents were able to buy me a funeral stele.
“When I was 13 years old I wanted a Gandhara Buddha and then when I was 21 years old I wanted an Andy Warhol. When everybody else was asking for baseball mitts or a starter car at age 16, I was building this smallish collection.”
It wasn’t until 2000, however, that Naifeh started collecting in earnest, by which time he had abandoned his painting career. “I worked from when I was 10, in Libya, until I was 25 in Abu Dhabi. That was really the last year.”
Despite having studied art history at Princeton and Harvard Universities and briefly working at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, Naifeh was studying law at the time of his first Abu Dhabi show.
It was a decision that proved to be one of the most important in Naifeh’s life because it was while he was studying at Harvard Law School that Naifeh met Gregory White Smith, who was to become his partner and co-author for the next 40 years.
It was a personal and a professional relationship that resulted in two highly successful professional ranking business, which helped to fund Naifeh and White’s writing careers, and five New York Times best-sellers that included two biographies, Jackson Pollock: An American Saga (1989) which won the Pulitzer Prize for biography and autobiography in 1991, and Van Gogh: The Life (2011).
“The Jackson Pollock book and the Van Gogh book took 10 years a piece and between writing those, which were 10- to 16-hour-a-day projects, and running businesses with 50 employees in two offices, there was really no time to work on my art career,” Naifeh recalls.
It was during this time that Naifeh and White also renovated Joye Cottage, a 25,000 square foot property in Aiken, South Carolina, that had previously belonged to the New York financier William C Whitney. As part of that restoration, Naifeh and White created a new performing arts space that in 2009 became the home of Juilliard in Aiken, a week-long arts festival that is held in March each year.
It was also during this time that Naifeh and White started to amass an art collection that includes works related to Van Gogh, neoclassical sculpture by artists such as Canova, British portraiture including works by Joshua Reynolds and Henry Raeburn, and paintings of the Barbizon School.
After a lifetime of artistic and cultural overachievement, Naifeh and White’s relationship came to an end in April of this year when White finally died of the illness that had plagued him for decades.
“Greg had a brain tumour from the day I met him in 1974 at Harvard Law School. It’s very odd when you think that Greg had this brain tumour for 40 years. His brain was literally riddled with tumour, it was in eight different places in his brain, and he was constantly going in for medical operations,” Naifeh explains.
“I think in the last 15 years, he just knew he wasn’t going to live a full lifespan. He had 13 brain operations and multiple chemotherapeutic programmes, so he pushed me to go back to painting because I think he wanted me to undertake something that we didn’t do together.
“The art is the only thing that I’ve done without Greg and thank God it’s here, because I really can’t see myself writing another book without him.”
Naifeh returned to the studio in 1998, and it is works from this period that are being shown by New York’s Leila Heller Gallery at Abu Dhabi Art, including the wall-mounted Saida I: Black, a work of enamelled canvas from 1998 and Saida XXXVI, a copper-plated steel sculpture that resembles the forms of a traditional Islamic fountain.
Typically, Naifeh is working on several projects at the same time as he prepares to come to Abu Dhabi for the first time in four decades. As well as discussing the future of his art collection with curators from various international museums, Naifeh is in the process of reissuing the book he and White wrote about the renovation of Joye Cottage.
“I’m writing the last chapter and it’s so weird, it’s the first time I’m writing final prose for publication without him,” Naifeh explains. He is also looking forward to the publication of the last article that White wrote, about Van Gogh, which is about to be published in the December issue of Vanity Fair.
“There’s a wonderful phrase in one of Van Gogh’s letters to his brother, Theo. He says something like, ‘the problem with most people is that they don’t love enough art enough. They should love more art more.’”
• Abu Dhabi Art runs from November 5 to 8. Visit www.abudhabiartfair.ae for more information.
Nick Leech is a features writer at The National.
BULKWHIZ PROFILE
Date started: February 2017
Founders: Amira Rashad (CEO), Yusuf Saber (CTO), Mahmoud Sayedahmed (adviser), Reda Bouraoui (adviser)
Based: Dubai, UAE
Sector: E-commerce
Size: 50 employees
Funding: approximately $6m
Investors: Beco Capital, Enabling Future and Wain in the UAE; China's MSA Capital; 500 Startups; Faith Capital and Savour Ventures in Kuwait
New Zealand 21 British & Irish Lions 24
New Zealand
Penalties: Barrett (7)
British & Irish Lions
Tries: Faletau, Murray
Penalties: Farrell (4)
Conversions: Farrell
A%20QUIET%20PLACE
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Global state-owned investor ranking by size
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UAE
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Company profile
Name: Thndr
Started: October 2020
Founders: Ahmad Hammouda and Seif Amr
Based: Cairo, Egypt
Sector: FinTech
Initial investment: pre-seed of $800,000
Funding stage: series A; $20 million
Investors: Tiger Global, Beco Capital, Prosus Ventures, Y Combinator, Global Ventures, Abdul Latif Jameel, Endure Capital, 4DX Ventures, Plus VC, Rabacap and MSA Capital
Results
Women finals: 48kg - Urantsetseg Munkhbat (MGL) bt Distria Krasniqi (KOS); 52kg - Odette Guiffrida (ITA) bt Majlinda Kelmendi (KOS); 57kg - Nora Gjakova (KOS) bt Anastasiia Konkina (Rus)
Men’s finals: 60kg - Amiran Papinashvili (GEO) bt Francisco Garrigos (ESP); 66kg - Vazha Margvelashvili (Geo) bt Yerlan Serikzhanov (KAZ)
Company%20profile
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PRESIDENTS CUP
Draw for Presidents Cup fourball matches on Thursday (Internationals first mention). All times UAE:
02.32am (Thursday): Marc Leishman/Joaquin Niemann v Tiger Woods/Justin Thomas
02.47am (Thursday): Adam Hadwin/Im Sung-jae v Xander Schauffele/Patrick Cantlay
03.02am (Thursday): Adam Scott/An Byeong-hun v Bryson DeChambeau/Tony Finau
03.17am (Thursday): Hideki Matsuyama/CT Pan v Webb Simpson/Patrick Reed
03.32am (Thursday): Abraham Ancer/Louis Oosthuizen v Dustin Johnson/Gary Woodland
Earth under attack: Cosmic impacts throughout history
- 4.5 billion years ago: Mars-sized object smashes into the newly-formed Earth, creating debris that coalesces to form the Moon
- 66 million years ago: 10km-wide asteroid crashes into the Gulf of Mexico, wiping out over 70 per cent of living species – including the dinosaurs.
- 50,000 years ago: 50m-wide iron meteor crashes in Arizona with the violence of 10 megatonne hydrogen bomb, creating the famous 1.2km-wide Barringer Crater
- 1490: Meteor storm over Shansi Province, north-east China when large stones “fell like rain”, reportedly leading to thousands of deaths.
- 1908: 100-metre meteor from the Taurid Complex explodes near the Tunguska river in Siberia with the force of 1,000 Hiroshima-type bombs, devastating 2,000 square kilometres of forest.
- 1998: Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 breaks apart and crashes into Jupiter in series of impacts that would have annihilated life on Earth.
-2013: 10,000-tonne meteor burns up over the southern Urals region of Russia, releasing a pressure blast and flash that left over 1600 people injured.
Our legal columnist
Name: Yousef Al Bahar
Advocate at Al Bahar & Associate Advocates and Legal Consultants, established in 1994
Education: Mr Al Bahar was born in 1979 and graduated in 2008 from the Judicial Institute. He took after his father, who was one of the first Emirati lawyers
COMPANY%20PROFILE
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UAE currency: the story behind the money in your pockets
Company%20profile
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QUARTER-FINAL
Wales 20-19 France
Wales: T: Wainwright, Moriarty. Cons: Biggar (2) Pens: Biggar 2
France: T: Vahaamahina, Ollivon, Vakatawa Cons: Ntamack (2)
Indoor cricket in a nutshell
Indoor Cricket World Cup - Sept 16-20, Insportz, Dubai
16 Indoor cricket matches are 16 overs per side
8 There are eight players per team
9 There have been nine Indoor Cricket World Cups for men. Australia have won every one.
5 Five runs are deducted from the score when a wickets falls
4 Batsmen bat in pairs, facing four overs per partnership
Scoring In indoor cricket, runs are scored by way of both physical and bonus runs. Physical runs are scored by both batsmen completing a run from one crease to the other. Bonus runs are scored when the ball hits a net in different zones, but only when at least one physical run is score.
Zones
A Front net, behind the striker and wicketkeeper: 0 runs
B Side nets, between the striker and halfway down the pitch: 1 run
C Side nets between halfway and the bowlers end: 2 runs
D Back net: 4 runs on the bounce, 6 runs on the full
UFC Fight Night 2
1am – Early prelims
2am – Prelims
4am-7am – Main card
7:30am-9am – press cons
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The specs
Engine: 3.0-litre six-cylinder MHEV
Power: 360bhp
Torque: 500Nm
Transmission: eight-speed automatic
Price: from Dh282,870
On sale: now