Simon Coates and Ephrem Solomon have spent a quiet but rewarding month working alongside one another. The language barrier hasn't held them back. In fact, both artists, from the UK and Ethiopia respectively, reckon they've developed something of a "telepathic" relationship over the course of their residency in Ductac's Gallery of Light. The 37 pieces of work they've produced during their month-long stay - 19 by Solomon and 18 by Coates - are on exhibition and on sale at Ductac, Mall of the Emirates, until Wednesday. This is the first in a planned series of such residencies, that began on September 6 and that the arts and community centre has begun offering to artists based both in the UAE and abroad. Once Solomon and Coates's show is over, two more artists will come to work in the space on Saturday for a month. The organisers are keen to emphasise the open-studio element of the programme and to encourage the public to come see them at work. "Something just clicked between us when we met," says Coates, who is originally from London but has recently moved to Dubai. Solomon nods in agreement, and explains that they'd never seen each other's work before sitting down to paint together, as he'd applied for the residency from Addis Ababa. "When we first started, Ephrem started work on a small image on cardboard of two chairs, black and white, next to each other," says Coates. "I asked him what was happening in this piece, and he said 'That's you and me, black and white, working together in this environment'. It was a good icebreaker." The artists are remarkably different in style, which is part of what makes a shared residency interesting. Solomon places Ethiopian politics and print at the centre of his efforts in art and life. Though trained as a printmaker, which comes through in his exquisite etchings in cardboard, the artist has also chopped up old Amharic-language newspapers - some from the Haile Selassie era - before pasting sections on to cardboard to form a rough base on which to paint. Tall, thin bodies with gangly legs seem to shuffle across these works. Amharic is daubed across it in bold red, juxtaposing the elements one might find on an Ethiopian identity card - name, age, tribe - on each of the images. "These figures are me and my generation," says the artist. "They have distorted bodies because they're not strong, not able. It's not comfortable to be a young person in Ethiopia." He explains that the legacy of the brutal communist regime of the Derg underpins his work. The Derg was headed up by Mengistu Haile Mariam, responsible for a genocide in the 1970s known as the Red Terror, the effect of which is still felt, according to the artist. "We need peace and good government to get to the future I see for Ethiopia," he says. Coates, on the other hand, offers a far more introspective presence. His works are darker, more elemental and symbolic in imagery. He says his studio time in Ductac has stripped down his style to just two or three colours: white, black and red, the same that Solomon has used in his cardboard-based pieces. It has also reined in Coates's enthusiastic paint-flicking as well. Earlier pieces show a tendency for Coates not to know when to finish, bathing his work in dots of paint. Sometimes it works, sometimes it does not, but the pieces produced for the Ductac residency suggest a desire for a cleaner and more exacting style. "I find painting enormously difficult, but it's like a form of self-flagellation for me," he says. "Here, I wanted a challenge so as to up my game." For the stygian blackness that typifies Coates's latest paintings, he went back to the true master of black - Caravaggio - in a bid to understand how such a dominant colour can be shaped with a bit of coaxing. In these scenes, we see working animals that writhe under their burdens, and the head of an enraged horse rising from a broken body in a wheelchair.
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