US students stage walkout to protest Jerry Seinfeld’s ceremony speech

Several students walked out of Duke University’s commencement ceremony on Sunday to protest its guest speaker, comedian Jerry Seinfeld, over his support of Israel amid the war in Gaza. (AFP, Duke University)
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Updated 13 May 2024
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US students stage walkout to protest Jerry Seinfeld’s ceremony speech

DUBAI: Several students walked out of Duke University’s commencement ceremony on Sunday to protest its guest speaker, comedian Jerry Seinfeld, over his support of Israel amid the war in Gaza.

Video of the incident posted on X (formerly known as Twitter) shows a group of students walking out of their seats and carrying a Palestinian flag as soon as the comedian and TV star was called to the stage. 

The attention to the protesters was quickly diverted by the cheering crowd, who chanted, “Jerry! Jerry!” as Seinfeld would go on to give his speech and accept an honorary degree from Duke.

However, several boos and chants of “Free Palestine” could also be heard.

Seinfeld has been vocal in his support for Israel following Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack.

The comedian also met with families of the hostages and visited a kibbutz during a trip to Israel in December.

The walkout at Duke's graduation was the latest manifestation of protests that have taken over US campuses as students call for universities to divest from arms suppliers and other companies profiting from the war.


George Clooney reportedly called White House to criticize Biden’s remarks on ICC

Updated 07 June 2024
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George Clooney reportedly called White House to criticize Biden’s remarks on ICC

  • Oscar winner defends lawyer wife’s role in arrest warrant being issued for Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu
  • US leader condemned court action as ‘outrageous’ and hinted at possible sanctions

DUBAI: Hollywood star George Clooney reportedly called the White House to complain about US President Joe Biden’s criticism of the International Criminal Court over its actions against Israeli leaders, according to The Washington Post.

The Oscar-winning actor’s wife, Lebanese British human rights lawyer Amal Clooney, was involved in the case, which resulted in the court seeking an arrest warrant for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Clooney is believed to have called Steve Ricchetti, a senior aide to the president, to voice his concern over Biden’s condemnation of the ICC’s chief prosecutor, Karim Khan.

The US leader labeled the ICC’s issuing of arrest warrants “outrageous” and suggested possible sanctions against the court.

On May 20, Khan announced his intention to charge Netanyahu, along with Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, Hamas leader Yehiya Sinwar, and two other top Hamas figures, with war crimes and crimes against humanity.

Amal Clooney later said that the prosecutor’s office had enlisted her to assist with the investigation by reviewing evidence of suspected war crimes and providing legal analysis.

A statement issued by the Clooney Foundation for Justice, a human rights organization she launched with her husband, said the team’s legal findings were “unanimous.”

“I do not accept that any conflict should be beyond the reach of the law, nor that any perpetrator should be above the law,” Amal wrote. “So I support the historic step that the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court has taken to bring justice to victims of atrocities in Israel and Palestine.”

After the warrant announcement, Biden said: “The ICC prosecutor’s application for arrest warrants against Israeli leaders is outrageous.

“And let me be clear: Whatever this prosecutor might imply, there is no equivalence — none — between Israel and Hamas. We will always stand with Israel against threats to its security.” 

According to The Washington Post, Clooney was also disheartened by the administration’s initial willingness to impose sanctions on the ICC, with his wife likely to be affected by any penalties.


Dubai’s Tresind Studio on World’s 50 Best Restaurants 2024 list

Updated 07 June 2024
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Dubai’s Tresind Studio on World’s 50 Best Restaurants 2024 list

DUBAI: Dubai’s Tresind Studio has secured a spot on the World’s 50 Best Restaurants 2024 list announced in Las Vegas on Thursday.

The restaurant — which also holds two Michelin stars — was named the Best Restaurant in Middle East and Africa and was placed 13th on the overall list. 

Tresind Studio is helmed by Indian chef Himanshu Saini and is located at St. Regis Gardens on Palm Jumeirah.

The restaurant was also included in last year’s list, where it ranked 11th.

The awards ceremony honors restaurants from 24 territories across five continents.
 


First Saudi Fashion Awards honors local, global creatives 

Updated 07 June 2024
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First Saudi Fashion Awards honors local, global creatives 

  • Kingdom’s Tima Abid wins coveted Designer of the Year award
  • Women-owned Saudi brand Chaldene takes sustainability prize

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia designer Tima Abid won the coveted Designer of the Year prize at the jointly-held Women’s Wear Daily Global Fashion Summit and Fashion Awards in Riyadh on Thursday evening.

The event was hosted by the King Abdullah Financial District Development and Management Co. The country’s first Fashion Awards was presented by the Chalhoub Group.

The two events honored designers and companies in the fashion, beauty and retail industries.

The Sustainability Award went to Chaldene, an eco-conscious brand owned by women from Saudi Arabia. The Fashion Stylist Award was won by Al-Anoud Al-Suwailem, and the Fashion Photography Award by Norah Al-Amri.

Streetwear brand 1886 took the Menswear Award, and Kaf by Kaf won the Womenswear Award. The Bridal Brand Prize was taken by Dar Al-Hanouf, and Yataghan received the Jewelry Brand Award.

The International Brand of the Year Award went to Loro Piana, and the International Designer of the Year Award to Norma Kamali.

There were several Saudi Arabia brands nominated for honors including Dracaena Cinnabari, Yousef Akbar and Atelier Hekayat. 

Saudi Arabia singer Loulwa delighted the audience with her performance during the gala meal.

Fashion Commission CEO Burak Cakmak, Fairchild Media Group Editor James Fallon, and representatives from the Chalhoub Group presented the awards.

The jury included senior executives and managers from the Chalhoub Group, Mytheresa, LVMH and Hia Magazine.


Saudi collector’s works to ‘dominate’ London auction 

Updated 07 June 2024
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Saudi collector’s works to ‘dominate’ London auction 

  • Highlights from Jeddah mayor Mohammed Said Farsi’s remarkable collection of art that will go under the hammer this month 

Saddek Wasil 

‘Untitled (Open Book With Hands)’ 

On June 12, London’s Sloane Street Auctions will hold its Summer Fine Art auction, which, it says, will be ‘dominated’ by works from the collection of the late Dr. Mohammed Said Farsi, the former mayor of Jeddah who died in 2019 and is credited with turning the coastal city into an “open-air museum.” Well-known as a lover of art, Farsi supplied numerous “landmark” auctions with “millions of pounds worth of Middle Eastern and Western art over the past two decades,” according to Sloane Street Auctions.  

“Dr Farsi’s collection must have the most widespread appeal for collectors with its extraordinarily eclectic offering,” Daniel Hunt of Sloane Street Auctions said in a press release. “His impeccable taste and astute eye, coupled with his standing as a leading figure in modern Arabia make this catalogue of treasures a must for serious collectors in both East and West.” 

Among the gems on offer on June 12 are a few works by artists from the Kingdom, including this bronze piece from Makkah-born sculptor Saddek Wasil. According to the Edge of Arabia website, Wasil’s works are “not to be understood as a present state, but hold the promise of future success in overcoming … boundaries.” The work is expected to fetch up to £1,000 ($1,280) at the auction.  

David Hockney 

Lithograph from the ‘Swimming Pool’ series 

Farsi was equally interested in both regional and international artists, and this David Hockney lithograph shows his talent for identifying great work. A painting from the same “Swimming Pool” series — “Portrait of An Artist (Pool With Two Figures)” is the most expensive painting ever sold by a living artist, garnering $90 million in 2018. The 86-year-old English painter and photographer is one of the leading lights of the pop-art movement, and the swimming pool became his muse. Talking to Diane Hanson in 2009, he explained that he was flying over Los Angeles in the 1960s, when “I looked down to see blue swimming pools all over and I realized that a swimming pool in England would have been a luxury, whereas here they are not.” Hockney saw swimming pools as symbols of the American Dream and has continued to paint them ever since.  

Seif Wanly  

‘Dark Self’ 

Farsi is especially renowned for his collection of works from the pioneers of Middle Eastern, and particularly Egyptian, modern art. The lots from his collection on sale at Sloane Street Auctions include 48 works by the brothers Seif and Adham Wanly — two of the most significant modern Arab artists. This work from 1970 is one of several self-portraits by Seif that will be up for sale.  

The Wanly brothers came from an aristocratic family and were introduced to art early. Seif studied under the Italian painter Ottorino Bicchi in Alexandria. In 1935, the brothers founded the Hall for Fine Arts in Alexandria and Seif’s atelier became a cultural meeting place. Art historian Nadia Radwan has noted that, following Adham’s death in 1959, “which affected him profoundly, he introduced a darker palette of colors and shades in his paintings,” such as those seen here. 

Abdul Hazi El-Gazzar 

‘Portrait of an Italian Physician’ 

Although he died young, aged just 40, El-Gazzar is widely recognized as one of Egyptian modern art’s most significant figures. His biographer Dr. S. Sharouny, wrote in 2007 that he “left behind a national artistic wealth that has only recently been acknowledged and appreciated.” El-Gazzar studied in Rome, which is likely where he met the subject of this portrait. This early work hints at El-Gazzar’s later choices of depicting, as Sharouny writes “ordinary working-class people … and through his strong line and color (giving them) a certain nobility.” 

‘Kiswah Panel’ 

According to Sloane Street Auctions, this silver and gilt appliqué panel of the Kiswah (the cloth which covers the Kaaba, the sacred stone building at the heart of Makkah’s Great Mosque) from Farsi’s collection was likely a gift from King Fahd.  

Mohamed Nagy  

‘A Rural Landscape in France’ 

The Egyptian painter is another of the pioneers of the region’s modern-art movement. He reportedly studied under Claude Monet at the Academy of Fine Arts in Florence, Italy, and was clearly inspired by the European Masters, as this painting shows. He returned to Egypt after the outbreak of World War I, and later became the director of Alexandria’s Museum of Modern Art. 


TeamLab Borderless museum opens in Jeddah  

Updated 07 June 2024
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TeamLab Borderless museum opens in Jeddah  

JEDDAH: The teamLab Borderless museum in Jeddah Historic District, Al-Balad, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, will open on June 10. The museum is a collaborative project between the Saudi Ministry of Culture and teamLab, an international art collective founded in Tokyo in 2001. 

A press statement from the ministry stated: “This creative museum represents part of the efforts of the Ministry of Culture to attract the best exhibitions and art museums from around the world to provide a creative cultural experience within the Kingdom, in addition to enriching historical areas, enhancing the visitor experience, and promoting the Saudi cultural sector.” 

Eight of the works on display have been designed specifically for the Jeddah museum, teamLab’s first in the Middle East.  

Here, we present some of the highlights from the museum. 

‘Universe of Fire Particles: Born in the Darkness, Return to the Darkness’ 

One of the installations created especially for the Jeddah museum. Massive rectangular megaliths emerge from the floors, extending into the air, where they are, at times, engulfed in flames. 

‘Persistence of Life in the Sandfall’  

Another Jeddah exclusive, in which sand cascades down a grand staircase like a waterfall. Within it, towering flowers emerge, symbolizing resilience and growth.  

‘Dark Waves: Born in the Darkness, Return to the Darkness’ 

A captivating display in which waves of darkness ebb and flow, symbolizing the cyclical nature of life and existence. 

‘Flowers and People Cannot be Controlled but Live Together’  

This artwork showcases the harmonious coexistence of flowers and people, highlighting the elegance and beauty of uncontrolled nature. 

‘Infinite Crystal World’  

A mesmerizing collection of crystals that reflect and refract light, creating a dazzling and immersive experience for visitors.