DUBAI - Auction
house Christie's has set the highest ever guide price for a work by an
Arab artist by putting a value of 600,000 to 800,000 dollars on a
double calligraphy by Egyptian artist Ahmed Mustafa.
His "Remembrance and Gratitude" will go under the hammer in Dubai on Tuesday at a two-day auction at which the fine arts firm expects sales of between 12.9 and 17.8 million dollars.
"Expectations
are very high, especially with regards to the exhibited works of
exceptional quality," Jussi Pylkkanen, Christie's Middle East and
Europe president, told AFP.
Works by Middle East artists take
centre stage, with other prominent Arab items including a landscape
painting by late Syrian artist Fateh Moudarres valued at
180,000-250,000 dollars.
Indian and Pakistani works also feature
prominently, and Christie's has put a value of up to half a million
dollars on a giant painting by Maqbool Fida Husain.
The first night of the auction in a Dubai hotel will focus on modern and contemporary art while the second will highlight jewellery and watches.
"There
is a lot of liquidity in the art market... the demand for the arts has
risen this year, and the value of sales by Christie's rose 5 percent
compared to last year," Pylkkanen said.
"The market in the region
has matured," he said, citing the "proportion of the paintings coming
from outside the region and the proportion of buyers from outside the
region."
"Fifty-five percent of sales are expected to come from buyers residing outside the Middle East," he added.
Michael Jeha, the firm's Middle East managing director, told reporters that since its first auction in 2006 Christie's sales in Dubai have risen by 400 percent.
"We have sold so far works of art and jewellery worth 125 million dollars," he added.
Pylkkanen said watches registered the greatest growth in sales.
The
jewellery highlight at the auction is expected to be a pair of diamond
earrings, each weighing slightly more than 15 carats, with an estimated
value of between 400,000 and 600,000 dollars.