Sahara in Art and Cinema: Sand, Light, and an Eternal Story The great desert is not just a geographical object. It is a state of the soul that artists, directors, and photographers have tried to capture for centuries. The Sahara is captivating with its inaccessibility, its cruel beauty, and the unique silence that cannot be conveyed in words. However, art and cinema have found ways to do so. From the paintings of the 19th century to Hollywood blockbusters and authorial dramas, the Sahara remains one of the most expressive images in world culture. Why is the desert so attractive to creators and what do they find in its boundless sands? Sahara in Visual Art: From Orientalism to Abstraction In the 19th century, when European artists discovered North Africa, the Sahara became one of the main themes of Orientalism. French, British, and German painters traveled to the Algerian and Moroccan deserts to capture exotic landscapes, caravans, and nomads. Eugène Delacroix, Jean-Léon Gérôme, Gustave Guillaumin — all of them depicted the Sahara with almost ethnographic accuracy, but at the same time filled their canvases with romantic charm. Their paintings are an idealized image of the desert: sunsets, camels, white clothes, shimmering mirages. But a real revolution occurred in the 20th century when modernist artists saw the Sahara not as a subject, but as a texture. The desert became a source of inspiration for abstract artists: its endless lines, light fluctuations, absence of figures. For example, Paul Klee painted his famous "desert" aquatints, where sand turned into geometric rhythms. And the French artist Yves Klein, creating his monochromatic blue canvases, said that the color of the Sahara sky is his "blue," that same infinity that he tried to convey. So the Sahara stopped being just a place and became a state of color and light. In contemporary photography, the desert also occupies a special place. Photographers like Sebastião Salgado shot the Sahara as a dramatic ...
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