Everything must go! Expo 2020 Dubai pavilions slash prices on souvenirs


Patrick Ryan
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If you had your eye on a certain souvenir from Expo 2020 Dubai but winced at the price tag, then you could be in luck.

Many pavilions this week are slashing prices on merchandise as they prepare to offload their wares ahead of the closing ceremony.

The National visited pavilions to see what bargains were available in the last-minute sale.

Everything that we don’t sell will be given away free to expo workers
Saulloi Ismat,
pavilion staff member

“We have everything on sale right now and it’s all 50 per cent off,” said Alice Kuaningi, who was working at the Papa New Guinea Pavilion.

“We’ve got everything from coffee, honey, chocolates, lotions, oils, paintings and hand-crafted bags all from Papa New Guinea.

“The most popular selling item so far is the coffee. I predict we will have sold out of everything before the end of the week, people can’t get enough of it.”

The logic behind the sale was self-evident, she said.

“We decided to reduce costs at the start of March because we knew we needed to sell it all,” she said.

“The reason we have to sell everything is simple. It would be far too expensive to ship it all back home.”

Another pavilion that was also doing a roaring trade in sales since prices were slashed at the start of the month was the Bahamas.

Staff said visitors could not get enough of beach shorts and polo shirts as well as a taste of the country’s spices.

“We have 50 per cent off a lot of items and others are buy one get one free,” said the pavilion’s Gabrielle Moxey.

“We are nearly completely sold out of the polo shirts and the shorts, they have been so popular in recent weeks.

“People must be buying them up for their summer vacations.”

The hottest selling item, quite literally if it lived up to its name, was a local spice called Ignite.

Before March, a small jar would have set you back Dh45 but is now available for Dh22.50.

Bargain hunters could also find reductions at other pavilions, including Tajikistan.

The Central Asian nation offered discounts on some items but not all.

Saulloi Ismat said: “It’s not really a sale on everything, but we do have reductions on certain items.”

“For example, our dried fruits have been 25 per cent off since the beginning of March.”

He said the pavilion was in no hurry to offload its stock as quickly as possible, because they had plans for how it would be used once the world fair wound down.

“Everything that we don’t sell will be given away free to expo workers,” he said.

“We want to share our country with the people who have worked at expo.”

The Mozambique pavilion was also dropping the prices of certain items, most notably on wooden carvings handmade by families from the African country.

The biggest reductions were from Dh400 to Dh250 for the larger sculptures, with the smaller versions reduced from Dh250 to Dh150.

Basquiat in Abu Dhabi

One of Basquiat’s paintings, the vibrant Cabra (1981–82), now hangs in Louvre Abu Dhabi temporarily, on loan from the Guggenheim Abu Dhabi. 

The latter museum is not open physically, but has assembled a collection and puts together a series of events called Talking Art, such as this discussion, moderated by writer Chaedria LaBouvier. 

It's something of a Basquiat season in Abu Dhabi at the moment. Last week, The Radiant Child, a documentary on Basquiat was shown at Manarat Al Saadiyat, and tonight (April 18) the Guggenheim Abu Dhabi is throwing the re-creation of a party tonight, of the legendary Canal Zone party thrown in 1979, which epitomised the collaborative scene of the time. It was at Canal Zone that Basquiat met prominent members of the art world and moved from unknown graffiti artist into someone in the spotlight.  

“We’ve invited local resident arists, we’ll have spray cans at the ready,” says curator Maisa Al Qassemi of the Guggenheim Abu Dhabi. 

Guggenheim Abu Dhabi's Canal Zone Remix is at Manarat Al Saadiyat, Thursday April 18, from 8pm. Free entry to all. Basquiat's Cabra is on view at Louvre Abu Dhabi until October

Updated: March 24, 2022, 7:14 AM