by Bianca Bonomi, The National
Anthony Haden-Guest is to the world of art commentary what Hans 
Ulrich Obrist is to the world of curation. Both operate in fields 
traditionally excluded from the monographic series of art history, which
 prioritises an interest in the artist and the art over the 
distribution, dissemination and exhibition of these works. Both have 
pioneered interest in their relative areas; both are celebrated as 
prolific and engaging individuals.
As a writer, reporter and cartoonist, Haden-Guest has contributed to 
the world's most lauded publications; as a bon vivant and socialite, he 
has become part of the art world of which he writes. Rumoured to be the 
inspiration for the British expatriate journalist Peter Fallow in Tom 
Wolfe's The Bonfire of the Vanities, he has documented his findings in, among other titles, True Colors: The Real Life of the Art World and The Last Party: Studio 54, Disco and the Culture of the Night.
Having written extensively on the art market, Haden-Guest is bound up
 in the global arts scene and has watched the growth of the Middle 
Eastern cultural movement with keenness. "I've been going to the Middle 
East for many years," he says. "I covered the Lebanese civil war and so I
 started going to the region extensively from 1980 onwards. I'd go and 
see the galleries there and was interested in the wealth and scope of 
the art on show."
For Haden-Guest, the clichéd view of Arab art as "white and gold and 
ornamental" doesn't ring true. "In reality, it is far more complex than 
that," he says. "For instance, identity plays a strong role, whether an 
artist is Egyptian or Lebanese, whether they have spent their working 
career in London or Paris and how those European influences factor into 
the work, how different cultures complicate it."
Initially "sceptical" of the burgeoning art fair scene in the region -
 "I thought it was just a way of channelling in the big petro dollar" - 
Haden-Guest quickly came to see it as an encouraging reflection of the 
level of cultural activity in the region. There are also, he argues, 
excellent rationales for Art Dubai, in terms of bringing in Indian 
collectors and showcasing emerging artists producing work locally. 
Anecdotal evidence suggests that collectors in the Middle East, like 
those in China, are very motivated to collect work by artists from their
 own cultures, something Haden-Guest sees as " a good and healthy 
thing". "Not forgetting what Aidan Salakhova, who started Moscow's first
 commercial art gallery, pointed out to me once: 'This is the Russian 
Miami. They have six flights a day here.'
"I find Art Dubai of particular interest," Haden-Guest says. 
"Contemporary art fairs tend to have an identikit aspect, the Big Four 
most unmistakably. We talk about the 'globalism' of the new art world 
and, yes, it has grown bigger in every way and, yes, the technology of 
communications makes mountains of data available 24/7 and, yes, 
uber-artists are global in the same sense as soccer-players and 
conductors. Abu Dhabi to me seems to have the international art market 
covered, so that you are more likely to see all the big western and 
American names on display there.
"At Art Dubai, I saw no Damien Hirsts on the stands, no Richard 
Princes, no Murakamis and just one Warhol. Art Dubai is a regional fair,
 and it is all the more interesting for that. It is stronger on Arab 
art, with some very good Iranian art. It's not just another 
cookie-cutter fair selling blue-chip art. They are seriously showing 
what is being made out there in the region."
Which of these regional artists is Haden-Guest most excited about? 
"Rokni and Ramin Haerizadeh are extraordinarily good. I also like the 
work of Lebanese artist Walid Raad and Ahmed Mater, a Saudi doctor who 
is, geographically, right at the centre of what western media might call
 the fundamentalist culture. His work, particularly his X-ray pictures, 
challenge existing parameters of art practice in the region. In Sharjah,
 highlights included a painting by a Syrian, Saban Adam, and In A Strange Place,
 a 2009 video by the Turkish filmmaker, Kutlug Ataman, of himself 
walking blindfolded and barefoot through a desert. I am also keen on the
 Palestinian photographer Tarek Al Ghoussain, who has produced 
existential shots of himself, again, alone in the desert."
Does he believe that the movement of western curators and art 
directors to the region and the opening of centres such as the 
Guggenheim and the Louvre in Abu Dhabi are a natural progression and 
integration of the arts scene, or a worrying distillation of the talent 
already in the region? "Arts professionals are the condottieri of our 
time," he says. "But they can't be lumped together. They should bring in
 good ideas from the international art world but also develop what they 
find locally. Change and movement are, generally speaking, all to the 
good."
What of the pressures on regional artists to produce work for a western market? Have shows such as Saatchi London's Unveiled: New Art from the Middle East
 demonstrated that the west expects - and perhaps even demands - a 
particular type of work, focused on the issues covered in western media,
 namely gender and terrorism?
"There will always be pressures on artists, but real artists produce 
art," Haden-Guest says. "They respond to their own culture and what they
 know in the art world. Middle Eastern artists don't need to produce 
work for western markets. Their markets are very healthy, so they don't 
need to be reliant on appeasing London or New York collectors. I think 
if they continue to be true to themselves and develop as such, they will
 find plenty of collectors in their own cultures, which will translate 
globally."
Via The National
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