Safwan Dahoul (Syrian, b. 1961)
This lot is offered without reserve. The lot was … Read more
Safwan Dahoul (Syrian, b. 1961)

Rêve 7

Details
Safwan Dahoul (Syrian, b. 1961)
Rêve 7
signed in Arabic; signed and dated 'DAHOUL 08' (lower right); signed in Arabic; signed, titled, dated and inscribed 'DAHOUL Rêve 7 2008' (on the reverse)
acrylic on canvas
70 7/8 x 70 7/8 in. (180 x 180cm.)
Painted in 2008
Provenance
Ayyam Gallery, Beirut.
Acquired from the above by the present owner in 2011.
Literature
K. Samawi & M. Farhat, Safwan Dahoul, Damascus, 2009 (illustrated in colour p. 311).
Special notice
This lot is offered without reserve. The lot was imported into the UAE for sale and is held in a Designated Zone. VAT at 5% will be added to the buyer’s premium and will be shown separately on our invoice. If the lot is released into GCC/UAE free circulation, import duty at 5% and import VAT at 5% will be payable on the hammer price by you at the Designated Zone before collection of the lot.

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Michael Jeha
Michael Jeha

Lot Essay

Originally from Hama, Syria, Safwan Dahoul is one of the leading contemporary Syrian artists of the Arab world. He graduated from the Faculty of Fine Arts in Damascus in 1983 and several years later, received a doctorate from the Higher Institute of Plastic Arts in Mons, Belgium. Dahoul returned to Syria to teach and mentor young artists studying at the Faculty of Fine Arts.

Dahoul’s ongoing “Dream” series is undoubtedly one of the most renowned bodies of work found in the contemporary Arab art sphere. Since the 1980s, he has used this series as a platform to share his experiences and thoughts on how dreams have influenced him, specifically his artmaking process. Dahoul’s canvases capture key intimate moments that one may experience during different phases in life: slumber, friendship, isolation and mourning. The repeated female protagonist adds to this visceral experience primarily through her distorted body and deep eyes. However, one must not assume that this figure represents gender as Dahoul explained in an interview with Nyree Barrett, but instead that she “represent[s] humankind...” He also disclosed that initially the female figure was inspired by a woman who he had “an impossible love story with” when he was younger. Dahoul lives and works in the United Arab Emirates today.

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