Orient express



In April 1717, after bumping through the craggy woodlands and valleys of the Balkans, Lady Mary Wortley Montagu came to the ancient town of Adrianople. The city guarded the plains of Thrace and, further to the southeast, the approach to imperial Istanbul. That still distant metropolis was her destination; she was the wife of Edward Montagu, the new British ambassador to the court of the Ottoman sultan. But upon reaching Adrianople, Mary Wortley had, in a way, already arrived. It was here that she realised how far she had journeyed. "I am now into a new world," she wrote to a friend, "where everything I see appears to me a change of scene."

Her slow, cross-continent trip had already taken her past many strange and wondrous places - the primordial murk of the Black Forest, the shadowy secrets of the Carpathians - that would have seemed quite alien to any of the aristocratic dames of drizzling England. But it was only now, in Adrianople, in land firmly under the grip of the Ottoman Turks and the sway of Islam, that she found herself beyond the pale.

Mary Wortley's arrival in Adrianople marked her entry into an alternate universe, the "Orient". Such a powerful sense of foreignness, of breathing different air, was shared by many of the growing number of Europeans who poured into the Middle East through the 18th and 19th centuries. Geography, for such travellers, melted into a foggy map of civilisations. Like Mary Wortley, they seemed to cross an invisible line, from a culture they believed to know into a culture alternately baffling, alluring and repellent. The European imagination was bedevilled by this "other", the teeming bazaars of Cairo, the tapering spires of Istanbul, the veils and shutters of the harem, the steamy baths and gleaming scimitars of a world half-real and half-conjured.

Never far from that churning imagination were ever-active European brushes and pens. How European, particularly British, artists viewed the Middle East is the subject of The Lure of the East, an ambitious new exhibition at the Tate Britain in London. A portrait of Mary Wortley in "Eastern garb" stands amid a motley crew of oils and watercolours. The show revisits over200 years of Orientalist painting, with a heavy focus on the 19th century, when the region - diplomatically dubbed "the eastern Mediterranean" by the curators - was awash with European adventurers, businessmen, missionaries and that quieter species of tourist: painters.

It is hardly a coincidence that the same period witnessed the creeping growth of European political control in the Middle East. The Ottoman Empire, which for centuries had ruled the Levant, Arabia and stretches of the Maghreb, gradually succumbed to the advances of its neighbours and the retractions of its constituent parts. In 1798, Napoleon invaded Egypt in the first comprehensive European military foray into the Middle East since the crusades. By the end of the First World War, all the territory between modern day Egypt and Iraq lay in British and French hands. As European painters sketched the contours of the Orient, European politicians and soldiers redrew its cartography.

There is no easy allegiance between art and power, nor necesarrily any obvious connection. Yet ever since the 1978 publication of Edward Said's much-lauded and much-maligned Orientalism, European representations of the Middle East from the era of high imperialism have fallen under deep suspicion. Said argued that in describing and illustrating the Orient, western scholars, writers and artists systematised a welter of negative understandings of the region (its despotism, its stagnant timelessness, its decadence, and so forth) that facilitated and encouraged its political conquest by Europe. Napoleon's army, after all, arrived in Egypt armed to the teeth with artists and antiquarians. Knowledge was bound to force from the off.

Said spawned a ceaseless and emotional debate that provides the not-so-subtle subtext of the Tate's exhibition. These portraits and landscapes, watercolours and sketches are contested ground in battles that continue to shake venues like the Times Literary Supplement, the New York Review of Books and the halls of academia. As American and British troops patrol the streets of Baghdad and Kandahar, the eastern visions of their predecessors return as a reminder of the abiding complexity of the west's involvement in the Middle East.

Unfortunately, the curators chose not to confine the struggles of critics and academics to the whispered background. The controversy around Orientalism is instead loudly drawn out, lurking noisily about the paintings as if art were only politics by other means. One cannot pass from one room to the next or from one painting to another without the intrusion of hammy interpretive commentary, both in caption and audio. These additions - the contributions of a slew of well-meaning scholars - are too short to offer much insight, but long enough (and frequent enough) to annoy. They add a dreary weight to a series of paintings that, in its glowing diversity, invites much lighter appreciation and comparison. One reaches a more honest sense of the conflicted nature of the Orientalist gaze by ignoring the hackery and focusing within the frame.

The mission of any visitor to the exhibition is inevitably to distil the image from the word, the painting from the fluff of forced analysis. It doesn't require the assistance of extra captions to spot the obvious derogatory stereotypes in many of the paintings. William Allen's Slave Market in Constantinople (1838), with its chaotic depiction of swarthy, mustachioed Turks leering over wailing pale-skinned women and children, appeals to the crudest bigotry and macho conviction in the vulnerability of women. So too does David Roberts' sweeping oil of The Ruins of the Temple of the Sun at Baalbec (1861) open a chasm between "east" and "west". In the painting - composed twenty-two years after Roberts actually visited the Roman ruins of Heliopolis (in what is now Lebanon) - garishly robed and turbaned Arabs swarm clumsily over the crumbling and fallen columns of a once grand Roman city. Classical antiquity is the Arabs' false inheritance; it is up to the intrepid western observer to redeem civilisation.

Such expected rude simplicities fail to appear elsewhere in the exhibition. The "seraglio," or harem, was long the object of European male fantasy and lust. Yet the British artists featured here paint the harem in chaste, almost virtuous colours. Henry Pickersgill's women have little of the licentiousness that one imagines to have lit the western eye, but instead sit by open windows in indifferent repose. Most striking, of course, is Henriette Browne's The Arrival at the Harem in Constantinople (1861). As a woman, Browne was actually allowed into a harem and used her access to reveal a thoroughly domestic, unexotic world of frumpy women, their bored children and nattering servants. Where some Orientalists drifted into sexual reverie, others remained moored in a fairly pedestrian reality.

A piercing commitment to reality, to the granular and to the quotidian, separates the most masterful Orientalist artist in the exhibition from his contemporaries. John Frederick Lewis lived in Cairo for a decade in the 1840s. His paintings of the city, its architecture and people never succumb to that inclination so evident in the works of Orientalists like William James Müller, a Bristol-born painter who passed briefly through Cairo in 1844. Müller's watercolour of a market scene in The Opium Seller melds light and dark, placing blurred figures in the midst of shadowy uncertainty. Similarly, his Carpet Bazaar of flowing fabrics and colourful people makes humans indistinguishable from extravagant decor. Both paintings evoke a mood, not a moment. Lewis' paintings, on the contrary, maintain a fine distinction between place and person. His many depictions of Cairene public life, especially of the great bazaar of Khan al Khalili and the mournful street of the Ghouriyyah, are works of careful sensitivity, at once majestic in their scope and delicate in their detail. While his images, likened at the time to daguerreotypes, ask to be looked at on their own terms, Müller's draw their power from insinuation and assumption.

It is in the latter's impulse to fictionalise that "Orientalism" begins to take dark shape. And it is in the fruition of the narrative-driven visions of David Roberts and William Allen, as well as a few other artists in the exhibition like Thomas Seddon and William Holman Hunt, that it gains even darker relevance and meaning. The uncertainty underpinning the ongoing debate over "Orientalism" is whether it is at all possible for westerners to regard and study the "East" in total innocence. Must every brushstroke be inscribed with power? In indirect fashion, and totally despite its cringeworthy insistence on pseudo-academic punditry, the exhibition finds ways of addressing the question. The clarity of John Frederick Lewis is one answer. Lewis settles upon a humanist calm, nowhere more evident than in his study of a Commentator on the Quran (1869), in which an old, rheumy-eyed scholar takes notes as he reads the holy book in the last light of the day.

Another possibility - and my favourite - lies in Edward Lear's magical Constantinople from Eyüp (1858). Elsewhere in the gallery, one can easily spot Lear's massive landscapes of Damascus and Jerusalem made to look puny amid the domination of nature. Constantinople from Eyüp is a very different painting, so small it is easy to miss among its more expansive neighbours. A hillside cemetery stands in the foreground, cypress trees rising high from in between its ancient, tilting tombstones. In the distance and on the fringes of the canvas, the domes and spires of Istanbul twinkle white and blue, tiny and indistinct. Were it not for Lear's incredibly light touch, the painting could have sinister overtones. Instead, it is bright and almost reverential, but it does not give in to the kind of overstatement that monumental cities like Istanbul inspire. It is humble and demands humility. Peering down upon the splendid imperial city through the tombstones, Lear unearths the modesty we should expect of ourselves. and of others.

Kanishk Tharoor is Associate Editor at openDemocracy.net, a London-based online magazine of global politics and culture

Januzaj's club record

Manchester United 50 appearances, 5 goals

Borussia Dortmund (loan) 6 appearances, 0 goals

Sunderland (loan) 25 appearances, 0 goals

Suggested picnic spots

Abu Dhabi
Umm Al Emarat Park
Yas Gateway Park
Delma Park
Al Bateen beach
Saadiyaat beach
The Corniche
Zayed Sports City
 
Dubai
Kite Beach
Zabeel Park
Al Nahda Pond Park
Mushrif Park
Safa Park
Al Mamzar Beach Park
Al Qudrah Lakes 

What it means to be a conservationist

Who is Enric Sala?

Enric Sala is an expert on marine conservation and is currently the National Geographic Society's Explorer-in-Residence. His love of the sea started with his childhood in Spain, inspired by the example of the legendary diver Jacques Cousteau. He has been a university professor of Oceanography in the US, as well as working at the Spanish National Council for Scientific Research and is a member of the World Economic Forum’s Global Future Council on Biodiversity and the Bio-Economy. He has dedicated his life to protecting life in the oceans. Enric describes himself as a flexitarian who only eats meat occasionally.

What is biodiversity?

According to the United Nations Environment Programme, all life on earth – including in its forests and oceans – forms a “rich tapestry of interconnecting and interdependent forces”. Biodiversity on earth today is the product of four billion years of evolution and consists of many millions of distinct biological species. The term ‘biodiversity’ is relatively new, popularised since the 1980s and coinciding with an understanding of the growing threats to the natural world including habitat loss, pollution and climate change. The loss of biodiversity itself is dangerous because it contributes to clean, consistent water flows, food security, protection from floods and storms and a stable climate. The natural world can be an ally in combating global climate change but to do so it must be protected. Nations are working to achieve this, including setting targets to be reached by 2020 for the protection of the natural state of 17 per cent of the land and 10 per cent of the oceans. However, these are well short of what is needed, according to experts, with half the land needed to be in a natural state to help avert disaster.

Singham Again

Director: Rohit Shetty

Stars: Ajay Devgn, Kareena Kapoor Khan, Ranveer Singh, Akshay Kumar, Tiger Shroff, Deepika Padukone

Rating: 3/5

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Transmission: 8-speed automatic

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Director: Basel Adra, Yuval Abraham, Rachel Szor, Hamdan Ballal

Stars: Basel Adra, Yuval Abraham

Rating: 3.5/5

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The specs

Engine: 6.2-litre supercharged V8

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Brief scores:

Toss: Sindhis, elected to field first

Pakhtoons 137-6 (10 ov)

Fletcher 68 not out; Cutting 2-14

Sindhis 129-8 (10 ov)

Perera 47; Sohail 2-18

Mercer, the investment consulting arm of US services company Marsh & McLennan, expects its wealth division to at least double its assets under management (AUM) in the Middle East as wealth in the region continues to grow despite economic headwinds, a company official said.

Mercer Wealth, which globally has $160 billion in AUM, plans to boost its AUM in the region to $2-$3bn in the next 2-3 years from the present $1bn, said Yasir AbuShaban, a Dubai-based principal with Mercer Wealth.

Within the next two to three years, we are looking at reaching $2 to $3 billion as a conservative estimate and we do see an opportunity to do so,” said Mr AbuShaban.

Mercer does not directly make investments, but allocates clients’ money they have discretion to, to professional asset managers. They also provide advice to clients.

“We have buying power. We can negotiate on their (client’s) behalf with asset managers to provide them lower fees than they otherwise would have to get on their own,” he added.

Mercer Wealth’s clients include sovereign wealth funds, family offices, and insurance companies among others.

From its office in Dubai, Mercer also looks after Africa, India and Turkey, where they also see opportunity for growth.

Wealth creation in Middle East and Africa (MEA) grew 8.5 per cent to $8.1 trillion last year from $7.5tn in 2015, higher than last year’s global average of 6 per cent and the second-highest growth in a region after Asia-Pacific which grew 9.9 per cent, according to consultancy Boston Consulting Group (BCG). In the region, where wealth grew just 1.9 per cent in 2015 compared with 2014, a pickup in oil prices has helped in wealth generation.

BCG is forecasting MEA wealth will rise to $12tn by 2021, growing at an annual average of 8 per cent.

Drivers of wealth generation in the region will be split evenly between new wealth creation and growth of performance of existing assets, according to BCG.

Another general trend in the region is clients’ looking for a comprehensive approach to investing, according to Mr AbuShaban.

“Institutional investors or some of the families are seeing a slowdown in the available capital they have to invest and in that sense they are looking at optimizing the way they manage their portfolios and making sure they are not investing haphazardly and different parts of their investment are working together,” said Mr AbuShaban.

Some clients also have a higher appetite for risk, given the low interest-rate environment that does not provide enough yield for some institutional investors. These clients are keen to invest in illiquid assets, such as private equity and infrastructure.

“What we have seen is a desire for higher returns in what has been a low-return environment specifically in various fixed income or bonds,” he said.

“In this environment, we have seen a de facto increase in the risk that clients are taking in things like illiquid investments, private equity investments, infrastructure and private debt, those kind of investments were higher illiquidity results in incrementally higher returns.”

The Abu Dhabi Investment Authority, one of the largest sovereign wealth funds, said in its 2016 report that has gradually increased its exposure in direct private equity and private credit transactions, mainly in Asian markets and especially in China and India. The authority’s private equity department focused on structured equities owing to “their defensive characteristics.”

Abu Dhabi World Pro 2019 remaining schedule:

Wednesday April 24: Abu Dhabi World Professional Jiu-Jitsu Championship, 11am-6pm

Thursday April 25:  Abu Dhabi World Professional Jiu-Jitsu Championship, 11am-5pm

Friday April 26: Finals, 3-6pm

Saturday April 27: Awards ceremony, 4pm and 8pm

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Skewed figures

In the village of Mevagissey in southwest England the housing stock has doubled in the last century while the number of residents is half the historic high. The village's Neighbourhood Development Plan states that 26% of homes are holiday retreats. Prices are high, averaging around £300,000, £50,000 more than the Cornish average of £250,000. The local average wage is £15,458. 

The 12 Syrian entities delisted by UK 

Ministry of Interior
Ministry of Defence
General Intelligence Directorate
Air Force Intelligence Agency
Political Security Directorate
Syrian National Security Bureau
Military Intelligence Directorate
Army Supply Bureau
General Organisation of Radio and TV
Al Watan newspaper
Cham Press TV
Sama TV

What is 'Soft Power'?

Soft power was first mentioned in 1990 by former US Defence Secretary Joseph Nye. 
He believed that there were alternative ways of cultivating support from other countries, instead of achieving goals using military strength. 
Soft power is, at its root, the ability to convince other states to do what you want without force. 
This is traditionally achieved by proving that you share morals and values.

Electric scooters: some rules to remember
  • Riders must be 14-years-old or over
  • Wear a protective helmet
  • Park the electric scooter in designated parking lots (if any)
  • Do not leave electric scooter in locations that obstruct traffic or pedestrians
  • Solo riders only, no passengers allowed
  • Do not drive outside designated lanes
The White Lotus: Season three

Creator: Mike White

Starring: Walton Goggins, Jason Isaacs, Natasha Rothwell

Rating: 4.5/5

The biog

Name: Fareed Lafta

Age: 40

From: Baghdad, Iraq

Mission: Promote world peace

Favourite poet: Al Mutanabbi

Role models: His parents