BRITISH INDIAN artist Sacha Jafri paces barefoot back and forth across his giant canvas stretched across the ballroom floor of a luxury Dubai hotel, listening to a young girl singing.
She performed Friday (25) on the almost-completed canvas measuring just under 2,000 square metres (20,000 sq feet), before it is broken down next week into 60 framed works.
Jafri's goal is to set a new Guinness World Record for the largest art canvas and raise $30 million (about £23.54 million) to fund health and education initiatives for children in impoverished parts of the world.
The 44-year-old contemporary artist, born to Indian father and French mother, says he hopes to double that amount when parts of his "Journey of Humanity" work go up for auction in February 2021.
"They will own a piece of the largest painting ever created, but more than that they'll own a piece of history and, ultimately, humanity," Jafri, in paint-splattered jeans and shirt, told AFP.
For seven months and at a pace of 18-20 hours a day, Jafri has been working on his latest creation with almost 300 layers of paint, using over 5,000 litres and about 1,000 brushes.
"It's been a big journey," he said.
"It depicts the soul of the Earth, nature, humanity itself, the love and nurture of the mother, the guidance and protection of the father as they guide their child through life and enable them to feel safe, loved and brave, so they can grow their wings, make their dreams come true and take them into the solar system," Jafri said.
The artist said coronavirus has focused his efforts towards connecting people to counter its impact on children.
Children from 140 countries submitted paintings online to be included in Jafri's creation with its eight "portals".
"I paste those into the circular portals... I want to take us to a better world through the hearts, minds and souls of our children," said Jafri.
The children's paintings depicted their own journeys, with many drawing a spikey ball representing the disease.
"Imagine what... people can do if we actually stopped all the nonsense and realised one world, one soul, one planet," said Jafri, who has four more days to complete the work.
For the day's last show on the canvas, girls and boys performed an acrobatic, interpretive dance to John Lennon's "Imagine", with Jafri on the sidelines giving encouragement.
"Completely intertwine with what's in front of you. Become one," he appealed.
Clifford had previously pleaded guilty to the murders of BBC sports commentator John Hunt’s wife and two daughters at their home in northwest of London, in July 2024. (Photo: Hertfordshire Police /Handout via REUTERS)
Crossbow murderer found guilty of raping ex-girlfriend
A 26-YEAR-OLD man who murdered three women in a crossbow and stabbing attack has been found guilty of raping one of them, his ex-girlfriend, a British court ruled on Thursday.
Kyle Clifford had previously pleaded guilty to the murders of BBC sports commentator John Hunt’s wife and two daughters at their home in Bushey, northwest of London, in July 2024.
The attack led to a manhunt before Clifford was found injured hours later in a north London cemetery.
A jury at Cambridge Crown Court on Thursday convicted Clifford of raping 25-year-old Louise Hunt before killing her.
His sentencing for all the crimes is scheduled for Tuesday.
Clifford had admitted to murdering Carol Hunt, 61, and her daughters Louise and Hannah, 28. He had also pleaded guilty to charges of false imprisonment and possessing offensive weapons but denied raping Louise.
During the trial, the court heard that after killing Carol Hunt, Clifford waited for an hour before attacking Louise, tying her up, raping her, and then killing her with a crossbow. He later killed Hannah when she returned home from work.
The prosecution described Clifford, a former soldier, as committing a "violent, sexual act of spite" and said he was "enraged" after Louise ended their 18-month relationship. They told the court that he had "carefully planned" the attack.
Less than 24 hours before the killings, Clifford had searched for a podcast by social media influencer Andrew Tate, according to the prosecution. They argued that the murders were driven by the "violent misogyny promoted" by Tate.
Justice Joel Bennathan called Clifford’s crimes "dreadful" and "almost unspeakable".
(With inputs from AFP)