The Prague Post - Long, bumpy 4WD ride to Qatar's acclaimed desert art

EUR -
AED 4.284902
AFN 79.909342
ALL 96.383378
AMD 446.374387
ANG 2.088676
AOA 1069.768641
ARS 1667.932945
AUD 1.771353
AWG 2.099872
AZN 2.005313
BAM 1.955684
BBD 2.35116
BDT 142.121536
BGN 1.954491
BHD 0.439816
BIF 3447.28977
BMD 1.166596
BND 1.509104
BOB 8.083276
BRL 6.237903
BSD 1.16733
BTN 103.554833
BWP 15.529075
BYN 3.969047
BYR 22865.272246
BZD 2.34776
CAD 1.627576
CDF 2893.157276
CHF 0.930546
CLF 0.028538
CLP 1119.523157
CNY 8.305635
CNH 8.335028
COP 4518.341119
CRC 587.365019
CUC 1.166596
CUP 30.914781
CVE 110.53435
CZK 24.377221
DJF 207.327263
DKK 7.466357
DOP 73.133542
DZD 151.510442
EGP 55.505798
ERN 17.498933
ETB 168.568416
FJD 2.634115
FKP 0.865772
GBP 0.868046
GEL 3.161482
GGP 0.865772
GHS 14.523927
GIP 0.865772
GMD 83.995103
GNF 10120.216185
GTQ 8.944467
GYD 244.184411
HKD 9.079298
HNL 30.623327
HRK 7.531418
HTG 152.750903
HUF 393.10651
IDR 19358.602764
ILS 3.825732
IMP 0.865772
INR 103.527011
IQD 1528.240135
IRR 49067.007669
ISK 141.601404
JEP 0.865772
JMD 186.83526
JOD 0.827144
JPY 176.79516
KES 150.899531
KGS 102.018466
KHR 4690.880871
KMF 493.470084
KPW 1049.931938
KRW 1649.881083
KWD 0.357331
KYD 0.972838
KZT 631.00242
LAK 25285.957803
LBP 104468.629426
LKR 353.088972
LRD 213.078482
LSL 20.068657
LTL 3.444653
LVL 0.705661
LYD 6.317081
MAD 10.633525
MDL 19.470757
MGA 5221.095795
MKD 61.585171
MMK 2449.3118
MNT 4196.110196
MOP 9.358003
MRU 46.535548
MUR 53.021695
MVR 17.845708
MWK 2025.792915
MXN 21.447497
MYR 4.916621
MZN 74.545375
NAD 20.06536
NGN 1713.958393
NIO 42.790651
NOK 11.621304
NPR 165.688132
NZD 2.011077
OMR 0.448549
PAB 1.167335
PEN 4.037562
PGK 4.880744
PHP 67.809509
PKR 328.104979
PLN 4.252935
PYG 8164.513758
QAR 4.247686
RON 5.099218
RSD 117.170053
RUB 95.746301
RWF 1689.230317
SAR 4.375888
SBD 9.601772
SCR 16.822562
SDG 701.707634
SEK 10.959932
SGD 1.507854
SHP 0.916761
SLE 27.21085
SLL 24462.929089
SOS 666.707424
SRD 44.404132
STD 24146.171974
STN 24.965144
SVC 10.214392
SYP 15167.91731
SZL 20.018746
THB 37.91453
TJS 10.827109
TMT 4.09475
TND 3.394967
TOP 2.732284
TRY 48.642349
TTD 7.928528
TWD 35.59575
TZS 2863.991792
UAH 48.242027
UGX 4014.760899
USD 1.166596
UYU 46.598223
UZS 14057.476273
VES 216.014469
VND 30757.290957
VUV 141.078465
WST 3.241423
XAF 655.915125
XAG 0.024525
XAU 0.000293
XCD 3.152783
XCG 2.103875
XDR 0.812825
XOF 656.207674
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.816507
ZAR 20.073119
ZMK 10500.765032
ZMW 27.69452
ZWL 375.643282
  • CMSC

    -0.0600

    23.74

    -0.25%

  • SCS

    -0.1200

    16.86

    -0.71%

  • BCC

    -0.6600

    74.52

    -0.89%

  • NGG

    -0.0200

    73.88

    -0.03%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    78.22

    0%

  • RELX

    -0.9700

    45.44

    -2.13%

  • RIO

    -0.7300

    66.25

    -1.1%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    24.4

    -0.16%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1600

    15.54

    -1.03%

  • BCE

    0.1000

    23.29

    +0.43%

  • JRI

    -0.1100

    14.07

    -0.78%

  • GSK

    0.0500

    43.5

    +0.11%

  • VOD

    -0.0200

    11.27

    -0.18%

  • AZN

    0.3800

    85.87

    +0.44%

  • BP

    0.1400

    34.97

    +0.4%

  • BTI

    0.8000

    51.98

    +1.54%

Long, bumpy 4WD ride to Qatar's acclaimed desert art
Long, bumpy 4WD ride to Qatar's acclaimed desert art / Photo: Mustafa ABUMUNES - AFP

Long, bumpy 4WD ride to Qatar's acclaimed desert art

Deep in the Qatari desert, security guards have a lonely time keeping 24-hour watch over one of the world's most isolated artworks, created by renowned US sculptor Richard Serra.

Text size:

"On a busy day we can get 100 people," said one guard monitoring the four vertical steel plates -- each more than 14 metres (46 feet) high -- that makeup Serra's "East-West/West-East".

But when temperatures soar above 50 degrees Celsius (122 Fahrenheit) in the Brouq nature reserve, visitors are rare.

Even Qatar's art chiefs say that getting to the work -- which is spread over more than a kilometre (0.62 miles) -- is part of the challenge of appreciating Serra's installation, one of the Gulf state's big-ticket art purchases in 2014.

Qatar is gearing up to welcome more than one million people to the football World Cup which starts on November 20.

But few advertisements mention "East-West/West-East", located about 70 kilometres (43 miles) from Doha.

A four-wheel drive is needed to reach the artfully rusted steel plates, and barely a road sign points the way.

- 'Pilgrimage' -

Firas al-Obisi, a Syrian working as a guide in Qatar since 2006, said his car became stuck when a sudden rainstorm turned the roads to mud as he took a Chinese tourist to the site.

"Every time I tried to get out, it just became worse. The sand was like glue," he said.

It took four hours to pull his truck out, after one of the three vehicles assisting him also became stuck.

"The artwork starts through the journey," said Abdulrahman al-Ishaq, director of public art at Qatar Museums, likening it to "a pilgrimage".

"You have to really determine that on that day you are going to go to Richard Serra," he said. "And then when you get off the road and into the desert, you have to find it."

Serra, 83, is one of America's best-known living sculptors.

His works often come by the tonne -- one weighing more than a passenger jet -- and are found around the world, from New York museums to landscapes in Iceland and New Zealand.

Sheikha Al Mayassa bint Hamad bin Khalifa Al-Thani, Qatar Museums' chairperson and sister of the emir, asked Serra to take on the desert mission after he completed "7", a more than 24-metre-tall work overlooking Doha harbour.

Round-the-clock watch over "East-West/West-East", with guards and cameras, started after vandals struck several times in 2020 and 2021.

Qatar vaunts itself as one of the most crime-free places on Earth, and authorities made at least six arrests.

- 'Spotlight' on Doha -

"Vandalism is not really an issue in Doha, but we see it mostly in Richard Serra because when someone writes on it, a second person thinks it's okay to write on it," Qatar Museums' Ishaq said.

"Ideally the art should not be touched -- not even conserved -- because the idea is that it would rust with time. But when it gets vandalised, we have to clean" it, he said.

Doing so is "costly" and "interferes with the natural process of the artwork, how it decays", he added.

Serra's artworks are an extreme example of Qatar's huge public art investments, which have accelerated as Doha gears up for the World Cup.

More than 40 works have gone on display in parks, along roadsides and near landmarks.

They range from a 21-metre-high polished metal dugong by American pop artist Jeff Koons, to a larger-than-life blue rooster by German sculptor Katharina Fritsch that is on show in an official FIFA hotel.

It's not just the artworks, but Doha, that is on display, Ishaq noted. "This is an opportunity for us to have the spotlight."

H.Dolezal--TPP