Allah O Akbar II

2011

Plastic toy gun-caps glued together into sheets

150 cm x 150CM

Toy guns and their little red caps were ubiquitous for Saudi youth in the late 20th century. Called ‘Western Gun Caps’, they could be found everywhere across the Kingdom. This large-scale wall-based installation of "ten commandments", listed in Arabic and English using these plastic toy gun caps of Ahmed's youth are the appropriation of a song first performed by Gene Autry in the 40s, but also have resonances with Hadith (the recorded teachings of the Prophet Muhammad, PBUH).

The timeless character of the vagabonding cowboy is a persona present throughout the youth of many growing up in Saudi Arabia through the 1980s and 90s, seen in imported Western movies – a playful and frivolous character on the outside but with an almost inviolable moral core. The cowboy is the nomad of the Western sands, much like the Bedouin is the nomad of the Eastern sands.

Process

These huge wall-based installations are made by sticking together thousands of tiny plastic gun caps.

BF5 P4540
BF5 P4505
IMG 0844
Ahmed Mater 000601
Kingdom – Cowboy Code
Process – Cowboy Code
Process – Cowboy Code
Process – Cowboy Code
Process – Cowboy Code
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