in 2023 El-Salahi's work has developed through several phases. His first period during the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s is dominated by elementary forms and lines. During the next two decades, El-Salahi used more subtle, earthy tones in his color
palette. In Ibrahim El-Salahi's own words: "I limited my color scheme to sombre tones, using black, white, burnt
sienna, and yellow
ochre, which resembled the colors of earth and skin color shades of people in our part of the Sudan. Technically it added depth to the picture". After this period, his work became meditative, abstract and organic, using new warm, brilliant colors and
abstract human and non-human figures, rendered through geometric shapes. Also, his artworks often include both Islamic calligraphy and African motifs, such as elongated mask shapes. Some of his works like "
Allah and the Wall of Confrontation" (1968) and
"The Last Sound"(1964) show elements characteristic of
Islamic art, such as the shape of the
crescent moon. In the late 1970s and early 1980s, El-Salahi lived in exile in
Qatar, where he focused on drawing in black and white. Many of his admirers were unaware of his residence in Qatar, and El-Salahi found this distance to be "relieving", as he could use the time to become more experimental. El-Salahi is considered a pioneer in Sudanese modern art and was a member of the "Khartoum School of Modern Art", founded by
Osman Waqialla, Ahmad Mohammed Shibrain, Tag el-Sir Ahmed and Salahi himself. Other members of this artistic movement in Sudan were poets, novelists, and literary critics of the "Desert School", that also sought to establish a new Sudanese cultural identity. He began by exploring
Coptic manuscripts, which led him to experiment with Arabic calligraphy. Ultimately, he developed his own style and was among the group of artists to elaborate
Arabic calligraphy in his modernist
paintings, in a style that became known as
Hurufiyya art movement. In an interview with
The Guardian in 2013, El-Salahi explained how he came to use calligraphy in his artworks. Following his return to Sudan in 1957, he was disappointed at the poor attendance at his exhibitions and reflected on how to generate public interest: : "I organised an exhibition in Khartoum of still-lifes, portraits and nudes. People came to the opening just for the soft drinks. After that, no one came. [It was] as though it hadn't happened. I was completely stuck for two years. I kept asking myself why people couldn't accept and enjoy what I had done. [After reflecting on what would allow his work to resonate with people], I started to write small Arabic inscriptions in the corners of my paintings, almost like postage stamps, and people started to come towards me. I spread the words over the canvas, and they came a bit closer. Then I began to break down the letters to find what gave them meaning, and a Pandora's box opened. Animal forms, human forms and plant forms began to emerge from these once-abstract symbols. That was when I really started working. Images just came, as though I was doing it with a spirit I didn't know I had." == Recognition and major exhibitions ==