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TAM Gallery’s Artists of Tomorrow turns 10

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WHAT WE’RE TRACKING TONIGHT

Iran threatens war beyond the Middle East should the US attack

Good afternoon, friends, and happy (almost) weekend. As the weather cools down, it seems the news cycle is following suit. In today’s issue: We sit down with TAM co-founder and gallery director Lina Mowafy for an insider look at the program that springboarded the careers of many of Om El Donia’s best-known artists. We also revisit a classic memoir, break down the latest happenings in the world of football after last night’s Premier League fixture, and more.

First up, the news…

THE BIG STORY ABROAD-

🌐 Negotiations between the US and Iran are still dominating the news cycle. Today, Iran’s Revolutionary Guard warned it could take the war “beyond the region” if the US and Israel resume attacks against the Islamic Republic. “Our crushing blows will bring you to ruin in places you cannot imagine,” Iran’s Revolutionary Guard said. This follows US President Donald Trump halting his “scheduled attack,” saying he had been “an hour away” from relaunching the military campaign against Iran.

^^Read more on: Bloomberg, CNBC, and Reuters.

MEANWHILE- Chinese President Xi Jinping warned Russian President Vladimir Putin that the world is at risk of regressing to “the law of the jungle” while praising the China-Russia relationship as a stabilizing global force during talks held today. The summit between the two leaders featured affirmations of their ties, alongside renewed calls to end the US-Iran war.

^^Read more on: The Financial Times and The Guardian.

** CATCH UP QUICK on the top stories from today’s EnterpriseAM:

  • The institutional tranche of Korra Energi’s IPO was 2.7x covered on the first day of bookbuilding. Korra is floating roughly 247.5 existing shares on the EGX — an 11% stake — of which 60% are being offered exclusively to institutional investors until 24 May;
  • Cyprus wants to route natural gas exports through Egypt by 2028 — from the offshore Cronos field to European markets. Last year, the Oil Ministry signed three agreements with field partners Eni and TotalEnergies to transport and process Cronos gas through Zohr-linked infrastructure, liquefy it at Damietta, and re-export it to Europe;
  • QNB Egypt arranged an EGP 11.98 bn syndicated loan for Kased Khair General Supplies and Contracting to fund 6 km of new marine berths at East Port Said Port. QNB is acting as lead arranger, bookrunner, and facility agent for the 12-bank facility, which will finance the construction of berths with a 22-meter draft depth.

☀️ TOMORROW’S WEATHER- Good news, folks, the heat wave is behind us. We’re in for a breezy day in the capital tomorrow, with the mercury set to peak at just 29°C before dropping to a low of 18°C, according to our favorite weather app.

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AFTER HOURS

TAM Gallery's Artists of Tomorrow turns 10

🎨 TAM Gallery launched Artists of Tomorrow in 2015 when the Egyptian contemporary art scene looked a lot different. By co-founder Lina Mowafy's own account, the art scene was a closed circle of elite artists and elite collectors with little visibility and no norms.

EnterpriseAM sat down with TAM co-founder and gallery director Lina Mowafy for an insider look at the program that helped launch the careers of some of Egypt’s best-known up-and-coming artists.

Mowafy, who is herself an artist and a 2015 Artists of Tomorrow alumna, tells us that the idea behind the program was simple: pick 10-15 emerging artists each year, back them with TAM’s platform, and wager that the market would follow. A decade later, the wager appears to have paid off. The program’s 10th edition was held on 12 May at the Grand Egyptian Museum’s (GEM) Glass Court, a venue that doubled as a statement. “We wanted that juxtaposition of contemporary and ancient,” Mowafy tells EnterpriseAM, “and the artists loved displaying their work next to the work of their grandfathers.”

Over 100 alumni from nine previous cohorts showed new work in a chronological retrospective, alongside the debut of the Class of 2026. They included well-known artists such as Mohamed El Damarawy, Mohamed Rabie, Klay Kassem, and Alaa Abu Elhamd. Mowafy estimates that upward of 80% of Artists of Tomorrow alumni are sustaining full-time, thriving careers as working artists.

The selection criteria

Artists of Tomorrow now receives thousands of applications a year, up from a far smaller pool when the program launched with roughly 40 artists on TAM’s roster. The criteria are a mix of the qualitative and the commercial: candidates must be academically trained, technically consistent, and innovative. “They have to present an element of renewal, a new voice, medium, or philosophy. And we also look for people who have the character to grow and expand,” Mowafy says.

The less obvious part of the selection process is the data. TAM runs an online gallery, three physical locations, and a year-round exhibition calendar. That operation generates purchasing data — who’s asking about whom, which pieces are moving, and which artists are drawing repeat interest. Mowafy says that in more than 90% of cases, the gallery has already tested demand for an artist before selecting them for the program. “We don't guess in the dark,” she says.

What appreciation looks like

Mowafy doesn't have a single statistical figure for portfolio-wide appreciation, but the anecdotal evidence is telling. Artists from the 2015 cohort like El Damarawy and Rabie, who were selling work at EGP 5-6k 10 years ago, are now pricing in the hundreds of thousands, Mowafy tells us. Even artists selected as recently as 2022 have seen prices climb sharply. “Everyone has appreciated,” Mowafy says — including artists presented only two years ago.

The program’s track record has created a self-reinforcing dynamic. According to Mowafy, being named an Artist of Tomorrow now functions as a market signal: “other galleries begin booking the selected artists before the exhibition even opens.” Mowafy compares it to a seal of approval of sorts.

TAM now represents more than 500 artists, holds an inventory of over 20k pieces, and operates gallery spaces in Abu Rawash, Gouna, and the North Coast. The gallery also runs a corporate art consultancy — launched in 2018 — that has placed work in hotels, banks, office buildings, and residential developments. According to Mowafy, a commission for a Waldorf Astoria property in Heliopolis, where TAM pushed back against a London design team’s preference for generic contemporary art in favour of locally rooted work, helped the hotel snag a Forbes Travel Guide award. “We’re very excited about this arm of the business because it creates a parallel revenue stream for artists through large-scale commissions that didn’t exist a decade ago.”

Making art accessible

“We are seeing more and more first-time buyers, and we love that. It’s part of our mission to hand-hold buyers and teach them everything that there is to know. When a client comes in and says, ‘I don’t know much about art,’ that’s when my eyes sparkle,” says Mowafy. “I love seeing them develop their taste, figure out what speaks to them, and start connecting emotionally with Egyptian art.”

This year’s Artists of Tomorrow financial partner was the high-end financing platform Ulter by Valu. They offered attendees financing of up to 60 months with no down payment, a first for the Egyptian art market. “There are specialized art financing companies that exist in mature markets. We don’t have those yet, but this is a start. The availability of financing removes a barrier, particularly for young, first-time buyers, and it’s [mutually beneficial] for the artist, the gallery, and the collector.”

Art as an asset class

TAM has operated a resale boutique since 2013 for collectors looking to sell work from their collections. The secondary market in Egypt runs primarily through galleries: a buyer who wants to exit a position returns to the gallery that sold the piece, which maintains a list of collectors interested in that artist.

Growing pains

The growth of the market has not been frictionless. Mowafy points to a lack of regulation as one of the main structural challenges. She explains that sometimes unqualified intermediaries enter the market, inflating prices for young artists with no commercial basis. A young artist might be told by an informal dealer with wealthy contacts that their work is worth multiples of its market price, distorting the artist’s expectations and the pricing landscape.

Institutionalization in the form of accreditation or a regulatory framework could address the problem: “We need to establish baseline standards for who can operate as a gallery or art dealer and how pricing should work,” says Mowafy. What is certain is that the demand side of the equation is shifting fast, and Egypt’s art market infrastructure needs to keep pace to truly build an asset class.

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Under the Lamplight

Reflections on grief, mourning, and the disorientation of loss

💡 “Life changes in the instant. You sit down to dinner and life as you know it just ends.” With this quote, American author and journalist Joan Didion opens her book The Year of Magical Thinking, immediately confronting the reader with the fragility of life and how a single moment can shatter one’s world. The critically-acclaimed book stands as one of the most prominent works of memoir and grief literature, with Didion documenting the first year after her husband’s sudden death in profoundly honest and lucid prose.

What to expect: Didion dissects the nature of grief and its psychological — and physical — toll. Following the death of her husband and partner of 40 years, American writer John Gregory Dunne, she offers an intimate reckoning with a devastating loss. The Year of Magical Thinking is her attempt to process what happened and cope with the crushing weight of absence. She takes readers on a journey through the mind’s sheer inability to process death, even when fully aware of its reality.

Through a narrative that oscillates between self-reflection and journalistic observation, Didion distinguishes between loss, an event that can be rationally understood, and mourning, which she captures as a disorienting state that swallows all sense of logic, time, and emotional balance. The book also explores the concept of magical thinking: the innate human tendency to cling to small, seemingly illogical details or rituals as a subconscious way to delay fully accepting a loss.

What we liked: The book’s power lies in its raw honesty and its rejection of melodrama. Didion does not poeticize grief; instead, she portrays it as a state of mental and physical disorientation where practical, mundane details collide with psychological collapse. Consequently, much of the narrative focuses on hard facts and physical realities rather than direct emotional outpourings, giving the text a stark, clinical realism that still feels deeply human.

The verdict: The Year of Magical Thinking remains one of the most honest and profound explorations of mourning ever written. Rather than providing easy answers, it offers a window into how loss completely reshapes human consciousness and perception. We highly recommend it to anyone interested in memoirs or looking to understand the psychological complexities of grief and memory.

WHERE TO FIND IT- You can pick up a physical copy at Diwan or find the digital version on Kobo.

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Sports

Arsenal crowned Premier League champions + more Nile League action tonight

We’re in for some more Nile League action as the curtain falls on the final round of the championship stage tonight. The league’s giants — Zamalek, Pyramids, and Al Ahly — feature in three simultaneous, decisive fixtures to determine this year's champion. All matches kick off at 8pm on ON Sport.

The game plan: Cairo International Stadium hosts Zamalek vs. Ceramica Cleopatra, while Al Ahly faces Al Masry at Borg El Arab Stadium in Alexandria. Meanwhile, Pyramids takes on Smouha at 30 June Stadium in Cairo. Since all three sides mathematically remain in contention until the final whistle, the league trophy will be stationed at a central location between the three venues, ready to be rushed by private helicopter to the champions’ stadium for the coronation.

The scoreboard: League leaders Zamalek (53 points) require just a single point — a victory or even a draw secures them the championship, even if second-placed Pyramids (50 points) lands a victory. Should they finish level on points, the White Knights hold the advantage via head-to-head results. As for Al Ahly (50 points), they must claim maximum points tonight while relying on Zamalek to lose and Pyramids to draw at best — a scenario that remains a statistically steep mountain to climb.

Zamalek is desperate to appease their frustrated fanbase after missing out on a third CAF Confederation Cup title last Saturday, losing on penalties to USM Alger in the second leg of the final, which was also held at Cairo International Stadium.


In Europe, Turkey’s Beşiktaş Arena plays host to Germany’s Freiburg and England’s Aston Villa in the UEFA Europa League Final. Villa enters the showpiece event with sky-high morale after a thrilling 4-2 success over Liverpool in the Premier League, which booked their ticket to next season’s Champions League. Kick-off is at 10pm on beIN Sports 1.

AND- Arsenal has been crowned Premier League champions, after runners-up Manchester City played out a 1-1 draw against Bournemouth on Tuesday, handing the Gunners — led by former player Mikel Arteta — an unassailable points lead. This marks the 14th league title in the club’s history and their first in 22 years.

What’s next? While Arsenal’s final league match against Crystal Palace is now a mere formality, the Gunners are shifting their focus entirely toward the Champions League Final. They will clash with holders Paris Saint-Germain on Saturday, 30 May. If Arsenal manages to grab European club football’s biggest prize for the first time in their history, it will cap off an unforgettable year for the historic club’s fans.

This publication is proudly sponsored by

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Mark Your Calendar

A hit-packed Eid night with Ahmed Saad and Ruby in Hurghada

🎤 Spending this Eid in Hurghada? Your fun fix is sorted — Ahmed Saad, Ruby, and DJ Rodge are taking over on Thursday, 28 May at Hurghada’s The Garage, located beside Banque Misr. Launching the first Red Sea Festival, the concert promises crowd-favorite hits. Festivities kick off at 6pm — you can secure your tickets through Tazkarti.

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GO WITH THE FLOW

What the markets are doing on 20 May 2026

The EGX30 fell 1.6% at today’s close on turnover of EGP 9.3 bn (17.8% above the 90-day average). Local investors were the sole net buyers. The index is up 24.2% YTD.

In the red: Ibnsina Pharma (-5.0%), Raya Holding (-4.1%), and Emaar Misr (-4.0%).


🗓️ MAY

14-23 May (Thursday-Saturday): Cairo Light Festival.

19-20 May (Tuesday-Wednesday): Priceless Harvest: Chef Tarek Alameddine and Chef Tala Bashmi at Shemu on the Nile.

21 May (Thursday): The Prontos Michael Jackson Tribute night at Room Art Space.

22 May (Friday): Moustafa Amar at CJC 610.

22 May (Friday): The Goats Vol.2 at Teatro 90.

22 May (Friday): Ali El Haggar at Theatro Arkan.

22 May (Friday): Adam Port at Salah El Din Citadel.

22 May (Friday): Reda El Bahrawy at The Village.

22 May (Friday): A Night with the Queens at Abdeen Palace.

23 May (Saturday): Glory in Giza at Pyramids Panorama 2.

23 May (Saturday): El Leila El Kebira at Theatro Arkan.

23 May (Saturday): MIE Anniversary at CJC 610.

25 May (Monday): Sharmoofers at Ewart Memorial Hall, AUC Tahrir Square.

26 May (Tuesday): Arafat’s Day.

26 May (Tuesday): Andrea Bocelli at the City of Arts and Culture in the New Administrative Capital.

27-30 May (Wednesday-Saturday): Matsagharonash at Theatro Arkan.

27-30 May (Wednesday-Saturday): Eid El Adha.

26-31 May (Tuesday-Sunday): Eid El Adha official holiday.

28 May (Thursday): Ahmed Saad, Ruby, and DJ Rodge at The Garage, Hurghada.

29 May (Friday): Tamer Hosny Eid Al Adha Concert at El Arena.

29-30 May (Friday-Saturday): The Sound of Music at The Arena Theatre, El Gouna.

JUNE

1 June - 1 July (Monday - Wednesday): Acting Workshop with Ahmed Kamal at Maadi’s 3alam Tany.

3 June (Wednesday): Priceless Harvest: Chef Tarek Alameddine and Chef Tala Bashmi at Shemu on the Nile.

3-4 June (Wednesday-Thursday): Creative Industry Summit at Heartwork, iCity New Cairo.

5 June (Friday): Ramy Sabry at Tanza, 6th of October City.

5 June (Friday): Ali El Haggar: 100 Years of Singing at the Cairo Opera House, Zamalek.

5 June (Friday): Madinaty Half Marathon at Open Air Mall.

7 April - 8 June (Tuesday-Monday): Beyond Van Gogh: The Immersive Experience at District 5 by Marakez in New Cairo.

12 June (Friday): Anoushka at Ewart Memorial Hall, AUC Tahrir Square.

16 June (Tuesday): Islamic New Year.

20 June (Saturday): Mohamed Helmy’s Globally Local 2nd Show at Cairo Stadium.

21 June (Sunday): Medhat Saleh at the Cairo Opera House, Zamalek.

16 April - 30 June (Thursday-Tuesday): Early bird registration for The Marakez Pyramids Half Marathon.

30 June (Tuesday): June 30th Revolution.

JULY

1 July - 2 November (Wednesday-Monday): General registration for The Marakez Pyramids Half Marathon.

23 July (Thursday): July 23rd Revolution 1952.

24 July (Friday): Adriatique at the North Coast.

AUGUST

7 August (Friday): Sherine at Porto Golf, Alamein City.

21 August (Friday): Black Coffee at Cubix North Coast.

25 August (Thursday): Prophet Muhammad’s Birthday.

SEPTEMBER

26 September (Saturday): John Achkar’s Feena Nehke at Theatro Arkan.

OCTOBER

1-4 October (Thursday-Sunday): She Arts festival across Cairo and Alexandria.

6 October (Tuesday): Armed Forces Day.

24 October (Saturday): Blue 25th Anniversary Tour at New Capital.

NOVEMBER

28 November (Saturday): Shakira at the Pyramids of Giza.

DECEMBER

11-12 December (Friday-Saturday): TheMarakezPyramids Half Marathon at the Pyramids of Giza.

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