Highlights from Sotheby’s first-ever international auction in Saudi Arabia 

Highlights from Sotheby’s first-ever international auction in Saudi Arabia 
Refik Anadol’s ‘Machine Hallucinations: Mars’ will feature at Sotheby’s first-ever international auction in Saudi Arabia. (Supplied)
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Updated 15 January 2025
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Highlights from Sotheby’s first-ever international auction in Saudi Arabia 

Highlights from Sotheby’s first-ever international auction in Saudi Arabia 
  • A selection of lifestyle lots from the Kingdom’s first international auction 

DUBAI: On Feb. 8, Sotheby’s will host “Origins,” which it is billing as “the first international auction in Saudi Arabia’s history.” Alongside works from famed international artists such as Rene Magritte and Andy Warhol, and regional luminaries including Etel Adnan and Mohammed Al-Saleem, the auction will also feature a number of luxury items and sports-related lots. Many of the lots will be on display in the accompanying exhibition which runs from Feb. 1-8 in Diriyah’s Bujairi Terrace. Here, we highlight a few of the  items that will feature in the sale. 

Louay Kayyali’s ‘Then What??’ 

Anticipated to achieve an auction record, the expressive canvas from 1965 explores themes of exile, trauma and war, in relation to the plight of Palestinian refugees. The work will be offered from the Samawi Collection – one of the largest, and most long-standing, private collections of Modern and Contemporary Arab, Iranian and Turkish art.

Rene Magritte’s ‘L’Etat de veille’

One of the world’s best-known and best-loved Surrealist artists, René Magritte is famed for his intriguing images combining everyday objects in whimsical and thought-provoking contexts. “L’État de veille” belongs to a series of dreamlike gouaches featuring several emblematic motifs: a sky filled with clouds, window frames and a house façade.

Refik Anadol’s ‘Machine Hallucinations: Mars’

The auction also features extraordinary digital art, by one of the medium’s most sought-after artists, Refik Anadol. “Machine Hallucinations: Mars” (estimate: $800,000 – $1,200,000) is a real-time generative AI painting that builds from data from a space telescope with visual memories of Mars and endlessly reinterprets this to generate hallucinatory landscapes – a reflection on the relationship between technology, AI and space exploration.

Mohammad Al-Saleem’s ‘O' God, Honour Them and Do Not Honor an Enemy Over Them’

A true pioneer, Saudi arist Mohammad Al-Saleem greatly contributed to the evolution of art in the Kingdom and currently holds the world record for any Saudi artist (set at Sotheby’s in London in 2023). “O' God, Honour Them and Do Not Honor an Enemy Over Them” is inspired by the gradating skyline of Riyadh from the desert, with both the skyline and calligraphy blended into mosaic-like designs across the surface.

Michael Jordan’s 1998 playoffs shirt 

One of the auction’s top lots — expected to fetch around $1 million (SRA 3,753,740) — is this iconic No. 23 shirt, worn by the greatest basketball player of all time in the NBA playoffs of his final season with the Chicago Bulls, which has come to be known as ‘The Last Dance.’ It is, Sotheby’s states in the auction notes, “perhaps the most beloved period for the champion, as he reached the apex of his popularity and powers.” Artifacts from this period are, the auction house says, “both highly rare and coveted.” 

Ruby and diamond bracelet 

Among the many high-end jewelry pieces on offer at “Origins,” including an Art Deco sapphire and diamond bracelet, and a sapphire and diamond ring from Cartier, is this ruby and diamond bracelet attributed to US jewelry house Harry Winston, described as “an impressive and highly flexible piece crafted circa 1972.” It is expected to sell for between $210,000 and $300,000. 

Cristiano Ronaldo jerseys 

“Origins” will feature several shirts worn by one of the greatest football players in history: Cristiano Ronaldo. The Portuguese legend — who now lives in Riyadh and plays for Al-Nassr — has won FIFA’s Ballon D’or five times (only Lionel Messi has more) and has become synonymous with the number 7 shirt, such as this one, the Portugal jersey Ronaldo wore in the 2024 UEFA European Championships quarterfinal against France, which is expected to fetch over $50,000.  

Unique commissioned Cartier Crash 

“Cartier is renowned worldwide as the king of jewelers and the jeweler of kings,” the auction notes say. “Among their most famous creations is the Crash, the subject of an enduring mystique and cultural relevance.” These watches, with surrealist-inspired warped faces, were only ever produced in small quantities, and this particular model, which is expected to fetch between $130,000 and $260,000, is a true one-off, custom made in 2007 for “a top private client of the Maison.” 

Hermès handbags 

The auction will include several bags from the venerated French luxury fashion house famed for its exclusive handmade products/status symbols. Among them will be this limited edition Jaune de Naples Swift and Osier Wicker Mini Picnic Kelly, which is expected to fetch around $50,000 at auction, as well as “four exquisite Diamond Himalaya Birkin, Himalaya Kellys, and Constance of various sizes,” Sotheby’s says. 


Author Sally Rooney says she will use BBC royalties to support banned group Palestine Action

Author Sally Rooney says she will use BBC royalties to support banned group Palestine Action
Updated 17 August 2025
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Author Sally Rooney says she will use BBC royalties to support banned group Palestine Action

Author Sally Rooney says she will use BBC royalties to support banned group Palestine Action
  • The “Normal People” author made the remarks in a column for the Irish Times
  • Palestine Action was proscribed by the UK Home Secretary Yvette Cooper in July

LONDON: Irish novelist Sally Rooney has said she intends to use royalties from the BBC to fund Palestine Action, a group banned in the UK last month under terrorism legislation, it was reported on Sunday.

The “Normal People” author made the remarks in a column for the Irish Times, where she argued that if her actions are considered terrorism under British law, “so be it.”

She wrote: “My books, at least for now, are still published in Britain, and are widely available in bookshops and even supermarkets, in recent years the UK’s state broadcaster has also televised two fine adaptations of my novels, and therefore regularly pays me residual fees.”

She continued: “I want to be clear that I intend to use these proceeds of my work, as well as my public platform generally, to go on supporting Palestine Action and direct action against genocide in whatever way I can.

“If the British state considers this ‘terrorism’, then perhaps it should investigate the shady organisations that continue to promote my work and fund my activities, such as WH Smith and the BBC.”

The broadcaster and bookseller have not yet commented on Rooney's remarks.

Palestine Action was proscribed by the UK Home Secretary Yvette Cooper in July after activists allegedly broke into RAF Brize Norton in Oxfordshire and damaged two military aircraft, causing £7 million ($9.5 million) of damage. Membership, support or funding of the group carries a prison sentence of up to 14 years.

Rooney, whose novels “Normal People” and “Conversations with Friends” have been adapted into BBC dramas, said she felt compelled to speak out after “more than 500 peaceful protesters” were arrested in a single day on Aug. 9.

“If this makes me a ‘supporter of terror’ under UK law, so be it,” she wrote.

She noted that in the six weeks since the ban, police had arrested more than 700 people for supporting the group.

According to the Metropolitan Police, a further 60 individuals are set to be prosecuted, while Norfolk Police confirmed that 13 people were detained at a protest in Norwich on Saturday.

Rooney said those arrested included an Irish citizen and a woman in Belfast.

She criticized what she described as “political policing,” contrasting the arrests with the absence of action when a mural celebrating the proscribed Ulster Volunteer Force was repainted in north Belfast last year.

“Palestine Action, proscribed under the same law, is responsible for zero deaths and has never advocated the use of violence against any human being,” she said.

“Why then are its supporters arrested for wearing T-shirts, while murals celebrating loyalist death squads are left untouched?”

The author also questioned why Dublin, where the government has made its stance clear that Israel is committing genocide, had not intervened.

“Why then are its supporters arrested for protesting an acknowledged genocide?” she asked.

Rooney has previously expressed support for Palestine Action in a witness statement submitted to the High Court in London, where the proscription is being challenged by one of its founders.

She accused Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer’s government of stripping citizens of “basic rights and freedoms” in order to protect ties with Israel.

The ramifications, she said, were “profound,” warning that “an increasing number of artists and writers can no longer safely travel to Britain to speak in public.”


Khaled Esguerra transforms street aesthetics at Ishara Art Foundation

Khaled Esguerra transforms street aesthetics at Ishara Art Foundation
Updated 17 August 2025
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Khaled Esguerra transforms street aesthetics at Ishara Art Foundation

Khaled Esguerra transforms street aesthetics at Ishara Art Foundation

DUBAI: Abu Dhabi-born artist Khaled Esguerra brings a bold, participatory installation to the UAE’s Ishara Art Foundation’s “No Trespassing.” The summer exhibition, which runs until Aug. 30, brings together six UAE-based and South Asian artists.

The show explores boundaries, physical, cultural and institutional, through the lens of street art aesthetics recontextualized within the gallery’s white cube space. Esguerra, whose work spans photography, sculpture and performance, is known for examining the shifting identity of Abu Dhabi through the lens of its architecture, language and everyday textures.

With more than 800 sheets of carbon paper glued to copier paper, Esguerra’s largest work to date invites viewers to break the unspoken rules of gallery etiquette by walking across the art itself.

“Well, for one, there’s no way to interact with my work without literally trespassing into the space,” he told Arab News.

“Visitors tend to imagine this invisible barrier between themselves and the work … but the work confronts them as soon as they stumble upon the entrance of the room.”

The installation uses found materials, often seen in informal city advertisements, to convey the atmosphere of the streets. “Being faithful to the medium was important to me,” Esguerra said. “But more than the medium, I wanted to convey the atmosphere of the streets … I loved it!”

Beneath layers of carbon paper, words like “heritage,” “legacy” and “authentic” emerge, asking viewers to reflect on what these terms mean in the context of redevelopment.

“The work is really a critique on redevelopment schemes … by revealing (these) words … I wanted them to be confronted by this vocabulary and question their role in these manufactured changes in historic neighborhoods.”

Reflecting on the communal nature of the installation, he added: “It took a village and a half to develop this piece … it made me realize that as solitary and personal as my practice can be, it always was and will continue to be pushed by community.”


From street to gallery: Fathima Mohiuddin reimagines space in Ishara’s ‘No Trespassing’

From street to gallery: Fathima Mohiuddin reimagines space in Ishara’s ‘No Trespassing’
Updated 16 August 2025
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From street to gallery: Fathima Mohiuddin reimagines space in Ishara’s ‘No Trespassing’

From street to gallery: Fathima Mohiuddin reimagines space in Ishara’s ‘No Trespassing’

DUBAI: Dubai-born artist Fathima Mohiuddin, known as Fatspatrol, is one of six featured artists in “No Trespassing,” a summer exhibition at Dubai’s Ishara Art Foundation.

The show, which runs until Aug. 30, explores boundaries — physical, cultural, and institutional — through the lens of street art aesthetics recontextualized within the gallery’s white cube space.

“I’m not typically a gallery exhibiting artist,” Mohiuddin told Arab News. “I’ve spent a good part of my career as an artist and curator in street art because the urban art space has just felt like a more comfortable place for me.”

Fatspatrol, ‘The World Out There,’ 2025. (Supplied)

Mohiuddin, who recently returned to the UAE after seven years abroad, added: “I’m really glad to have landed right here in this show.”

Her work, titled “The World Out There,” explores the tension between personal identity and the outside world.

“Boundaries and restrictions have been a big part of not just my work but of things I’ve had to navigate in my life,” she said. “My work is very much about mark-making … to say, ‘I was here, I was unique in a world that doesn’t want me to be, and I mattered.’”

Mohiuddin initially planned to show small-scale works on reclaimed materials such as road signs and license plates, but found her pieces “looked really small and almost as if they were intimidated” by the space.

With curator Priyanka Mehra’s encouragement, she adopted a new approach. “I told Priyanka I wanted to bring in some texture and I’m going to paint with brooms.”

The result is a large-scale, layered installation that channels the grit and energy of the streets.

“To be able to loosen up and work freely without restriction and prerequisite was amazing. And brooms. I used brooms in my mark-making for the first time,” Mohiuddin said.

Through her personal, intuitive process, she hopes to provoke “a raw humanness” in viewers.

“Perhaps let’s say I hope it provokes a human response,” she added.


Nadeen Ayoub to represent Palestine at Miss Universe for the first time

Nadeen Ayoub to represent Palestine at Miss Universe for the first time
Updated 15 August 2025
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Nadeen Ayoub to represent Palestine at Miss Universe for the first time

Nadeen Ayoub to represent Palestine at Miss Universe for the first time

DUBAI: Nadeen Ayoub announced this week that she will represent Palestine for the first time at the 74th Miss Universe pageant, set to take place this November in Pak Kret, Thailand.

She took to Instagram to write: “Today, I step onto the Miss Universe stage not just with a title — but with a truth. As Palestine endures heartbreak — especially in Gaza — I carry the voice of a people who refuse to be silenced.

“I represent every Palestinian woman and child whose strength the world needs to see. We are more than our suffering — we are resilience, hope and the heartbeat of a homeland that lives on through us,” she added. 

Ayoub, a fitness coach and nutrition consultant now based in Dubai, previously held the title of Miss Earth Water at the Miss Earth pageant in Manila in 2022.

She was also the first woman to represent Palestine at that event, which is considered one of the four major international beauty pageants, alongside Miss World, Miss Universe and Miss International.

She was crowned Miss Palestine in 2022.

Ayoub is the founder of Olive Green Academy, a content creation school that integrates sustainability with artificial intelligence. 


Bella Hadid honors her roots in dress by Palestinian brand Reemami

Bella Hadid honors her roots in dress by Palestinian brand Reemami
Updated 15 August 2025
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Bella Hadid honors her roots in dress by Palestinian brand Reemami

Bella Hadid honors her roots in dress by Palestinian brand Reemami

DUBAI: Model Bella Hadid championed a Palestinian-owned brand this week, wearing a white dress she described as “a piece of art.”

The dress is by Reemami, a label founded by Dubai-based designer Reema Al-Banna. It features delicate, hand-drawn-style illustrations scattered across the fabric, along with a cut-out detail at the chest, a structured collar and a gold belt that cinches the waist.

Hadid, of Dutch-Palestinian heritage, completed the look with stacked gold bangles on both wrists. 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by Bella (@bellahadid)

In the Instagram carousel where she showcased the outfit, she also held Eternal Roots, a fragrance she recently launched under her namesake brand Orebella.

“Wearing a piece of art by a brilliant, beautiful, hard working, talented young Palestinian artist and designer today,” she wrote to her 61.1 million followers. “Miss @reemamiofficial a reminder that Eternal Roots isn’t just a name, it’s a way of living … thank you to the amazing, multifaceted Palestinian princess @reemamiofficial.”

Hadid then went on to talk about her latest launch, which has notes of lychee, papyrus and vetiver.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by Orebella (@orebella)

“Eternal Roots is about more than trees in the earth ... while it is blooming into our strength ... keeping our softness when the world tries to turn us hard ... it’s just as significant to hold onto your lineage when the world makes it hard,” she wrote. “Care for others. It’s about protecting the threads that tie us to our families, our heritage, our truth. It’s standing by the causes that matter, even when they’re not easy to speak about. It’s choosing to nurture what you believe in, the way you nurture what you love.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by REEMAMI/ (@reemamiofficial)

“Because roots are not passives ... they hold us steady through storms, and they remind us of who we are when the ground feels unsteady,” she added. “My roots are my compass. They are my strength and genuinely lead me through some of the toughest times … They are my family; blood tied and not, my ancestors, Mother Nature, God and Love. And they will always, always run deep.”

The model and entrepreneur also paid tribute to Chilean-Palestinian singer Elyanna by featuring her song “Olive Branch” in the post. “Music by @elyanna — bless you habibti, I am so proud of you and all that you do,” she wrote.