Description
In Al Reem, Alia paints more than an antelope. She paints presence. The Arabian gazelle emerges from a soft halo of petals and silence, part myth, part memory.
Set against a nearly weightless backdrop, the gazelle’s gaze is calm, yet watchful. Its form grounded in realism, while its world dissolves into impression.
The horns curl like desert winds; the fur holds the warmth of sunbaked sand. Every brushstroke honors the animal’s fragility and quiet strength.
Floral textures bloom around the figure, not literal flora, but an evocation of softness, of scent, of breath suspended in heat and dust.
With Al Reem, Alia offers a moment of reverence, where grace isn’t loud, but lasting. A creature once fleeting becomes immortal on canvas.