Dummar Road is a medium-sized oil painting by Syrian artist Tawfik Tarek. The significance of this work lies in the documentation of the railroad that existed at the time of its painting in 1908, which connected the city of Damascus to the port of Beirut.
In the painting, The railway cuts through the landscape, where we recognize poplar trees in two basic shades of dark and pale green, the defining characteristics of their leaves.
‘Mountains of Lebanon’ by Syrian artist Michael Kurcheh is a panoramic oil painting that depicts the vastness of the horizon as can be seen from Lebanon's natural mountain range.
The artist was keen to capture the wild trees and the fertile land with its red soil, grouping them to the right of the canvas while leaving plenty of space for the viewer to contemplate the sky and perhaps the sea below the horizon.
In this untitled work painted in thick oil colors on a wooden board by Turkish-Syrian artist Toros, we explore a vibrant landscape punctuated by a stone bridge that is likely one of the bridges connecting the two banks of the Qweiq River in the artist's hometown of Aleppo.
Despite the tranquil nature of the view, the brush and palette knife strokes reveal the presence of a gentle breeze on the water's surface and the cloudy sky.
In this small-scale work entitled “Nature,” the Aleppo Citadel is at the center of the canvas. The leafless trees reveal a wintry atmosphere enhanced by the pale blue color values.
We recognize it from the natural terrain and cacti surrounding the architecture that is widespread in the country, especially the Mezzeh area in Damascus and the cities of southern Syria.
In his signature style of abstracting pictorial details into color spaces and gradients, Louay Kayyali presents a pleasant landscape in his work Raa's al-Basit or Al Basit Cape, a geographical cape on the Syrian coast.
In it, he depicts a calm sea mixed with some greenery that adds warmth to the scene. Small cottages appear partially hidden behind what seems to be the edge of a small plateau, achieving color and composition variety.
We see the trees have become simplified to near abstraction while retaining the primary role of color in expression despite the artist's departure from the natural color of the plants.
Here, the landscape elements are complete: a land line, a horizon line, and plants arranged according to the human eye's perception. However, the artist's aesthetic focus seems to be caring about composition and the exploration for a regenerative artistic form.
In this oil painting, he cuts out a section that resembles a photographic snapshot, placing the viewer in the shoes of an internal observer, unseparated from the tree whose autumnal leaves are in the foreground of the painting.
On the surface of the large-scale painting, the artist depicts a vast expanse of yellowish-green grass, topped by a gray sky that hints at a humid climate. This expressive reductionism makes the painting seem abstract at first glance.