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Wassef Boutros-Ghali: A Retrospective (1965-2016) & Book Launch

October 3 – November 5, 2025

Untitled, 2015, Acrylic on Canvas

Untitled, 2015

Acrylic on Canvas

46 x 38 in

Untitled, 2005, Acrylic on Canvas

Untitled, 2005

Acrylic on Canvas

59 x 19.75 in

Untitled, 2016, Acrylic on Canvas

Untitled, 2016

Acrylic on Canvas

27.5 x 27.5 in

Untitled, 2007, Acrylic on Canvas

Untitled, 2007

Acrylic on Canvas

46 x 46 in

Untitled, 2003, Acrylic on Canvas

Untitled, 2003

Acrylic on Canvas

27 x 27 in

Untitled, 2010, Acrylic on Canvas

Untitled, 2010

Acrylic on Canvas

71 x 23.5 in

Untitled, 2010, Acrylic on Canvas

Untitled, 2010

Acrylic on Canvas

71 x 23.5 in

The Fish, 1974, Acrylic on Canvas

The Fish, 1974

Acrylic on Canvas

49.5 x 68.75 in

The Blue Door, 2000, Acrylic on Canvas

The Blue Door, 2000

Acrylic on Canvas

46 x 38 in

Study for Horizon VI, 2000, Acrylic on Canvas

Study for Horizon VI, 2000

Acrylic on Canvas

20 x 20 in

Horizon XIV, 2003, Acrylic on Canvas

Horizon XIV, 2003

Acrylic on Canvas

23.25 x 23.25 in

Horizon XIII, 2002, Acrylic on Canvas

Horizon XIII, 2002

Acrylic on Canvas

27.75 x 27.75 in

Horizon VII, 2000, Acrylic on Canvas

Horizon VII, 2000

Acrylic on Canvas

46 x 38 in

Horizon VI, 2000, Acrylic on Canvas

Horizon VI, 2000

Acrylic on Canvas

38 x 46 in

Untitled, 1992, Water color on paper

Untitled, 1992

Water color on paper

39.5 x 27.5 in

Untitled, 1965, Ink on paper

Untitled, 1965

Ink on paper

18 x 14 in

Untitled, 1977, Water color on paper

Untitled, 1977

Water color on paper

14.3 x 14.1 in

Untitled, 1970s, Felt pen on paper

Untitled, 1970s

Felt pen on paper

17 x 14 in

Untitled, 1970, Water color on paper

Untitled, 1970

Water color on paper

18 x 20 in

Untitled, 1967, China Ink on paper

Untitled, 1967

China Ink on paper

25.5 x 19.5 in

 , Untitled, 2018

 

Untitled, 2018

Pen, china ink and felt on paper

19.7 x 27.6 in

Untitled, 2018, Pen, china ink and felt on paper

Untitled, 2018

Pen, china ink and felt on paper

19.7 x 27.6 in

Untitled, 1965, China Ink on paper

Untitled, 1965

China Ink on paper

13.8 x 17.8 in

Untitled, 1987, China Ink on paper

Untitled, 1987

China Ink on paper

19.5 x 14

Underwater, 1993 Pen, ink & water colour on paper

Underwater, 1993
Pen, ink & water colour on paper

27.5 x 39.25 in

Untitled, 1987, China Ink on paper

Untitled, 1987

China Ink on paper

19.5 x 14 in

The Last Supper (La Cene), 1987, Pen, ink & water colour on paper

The Last Supper (La Cene), 1987

Pen, ink & water colour on paper

24 x 32 in

The Fish, 2018, Pen, china ink and felt on paper

The Fish, 2018

Pen, china ink and felt on paper

19.7 x 27.6 in

The Guard, 1968, Brush & Indian Ink on Paper

The Guard, 1968

Brush & Indian Ink on Paper

28 x 20 in

The Beast, 1993, Pen, ink & water colour on paper

The Beast, 1993

Pen, ink & water colour on paper

24 x 32 in

Encounter, 1987, China Ink on paper

Encounter, 1987

China Ink on paper

17 x 24.8 in

Regard (Look), 1991, Pen, ink & water colour on paper

Regard (Look), 1991

Pen, ink & water colour on paper

27.5 x 39.25 in

Egyptian Wedding, 1972, Felt pen on paper

Egyptian Wedding, 1972

Felt pen on paper

22.5 x 28.5 in

Autumn I, 1987, Pen, ink & water colour on paper

Autumn I, 1987

Pen, ink & water colour on paper

31.5 x 24 in

Press Release

Dubai, UAE – Leila Heller Gallery is delighted to announce the upcoming solo exhibition, a curated selection of paintings and works on paper by Wassef Boutros Ghali, titled 'A Retrospective (1965 - 2016)’ opening on 3rd October, 2025. 

Spanning several decades, these works reveal Boutros-Ghali’s distinctive balance between architectural order and painterly intuition. In both the large-scale canvases and intimate paper compositions, intersecting planes, subtle tonal shifts, and spatial rhythms evoke a meditative language that transcends geography, rooted in modernist ideals. In both mediums, Boutros-Ghali’s compositions are dynamic; they seem to breathe, their tensions and harmonies suggesting the shifting light, landscapes, and cultural forms that informed his vision. His work resonates with a timeless universality, yet carries the imprint of a life lived between continents. 

Architectural forms emerge, collide and reengineer themselves without a narrative in dazzling abstract compositions. With subjects based on mythology, on nuanced observations of daily life or stories conjured with the simplicity of dreams, Boutros-Ghali’s artwork speaks to the pure and unrestricted physicality of painting. Boutros-Ghali challenges the traditional and leading convention of figuration with his commitment to abstraction as a modernist method of self-expression. Each piece demonstrates his mastery in balancing architectural rigor with the sensibility of a painter, transforming pure geometry into a language of contemplation and a constant state of visual flux. 

Born in Cairo to a family of statesmen and politicians, Wassef Boutros-Ghali was drawn to the arts at an early age. As a teenager he demonstrated great natural skill as a draftsman. He joined the studio of Jaro Hilbert, a classically trained painter and inspirational teacher. Boutros-Ghali set aside the political legacy of his family and devote himself to a career in architecture, and then turned to painting. Boutros-Ghali served as a technical consultant for the environment and urbanism with the United Nations and executed buildings in Egypt, Ethiopia, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and the Sudan, in addition to growing his commitment to his artwork. Initially working in oil on canvas, Wassef Boutros-Ghali’s practice was reshaped by political upheaval and his 1963 relocation, which led him to create a series of china-ink drawings. Their constraints offered refuge and introduced a free-flowing quality that would inform his later work and sustain his lifelong passion for drawing. 

A 1971 move to New York marked an awakening. Immersed in the city’s vitality, abstract expressionism and minimalist design, his canvases grew larger, acrylics replaced oils, and figurative improvisations gave way to overt abstraction. In the spirit of Rothko and Reinhardt, surfaces drenched in singular color allowed his geometric forms to come alive. A return to Cairo in 1985 finally allowed Boutros-Ghali the freedom to pursue his practice without interruption. Increasingly the artist sought to harness vibrant color to articulate motion/energy within the box of the canvas. His later compositions reflect a meticulous yet openhearted response to the human condition; marvels of reason buoyed by a lifetime’s worth of lyricism. Wassef Boutros-Ghali passed away on March 15, 2023 at 98 years old in Cairo. He painted every day until his death.