Creative youth from across Saudi Arabia speak up about their art

A participant renders a poem during the event. (AN photo)
Updated 30 June 2018
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Creative youth from across Saudi Arabia speak up about their art

  • The founder of the project Ward Magazine is a student of only 18. The project started in December 2017.
  • Ward has organized three events so far and the magazine has seven electronic and one printed edition

JEDDAH: An e-magazine held a special evening on Saturday to enable young Saudis from all over the Kingdom to showcase their ideas, poems and artwork.

Ward Magazine, which was also launching its first printed edition, is an e-magazine that aims to support and encourage artists in Saudi Arabia whatever their ages, nationalities and the topics they want to be discussed in their work.

Due to the limitation of available opportunities and spaces for Saudi-based artists, and their centralization in particular cities, Ward was founded to publish their work, and it includes all forms of creativity.

On June 2, Ward organized a special cultural night giving space to young Saudi dreamers from both genders to disclose their thoughts in a creative, literary way.

The spoken-word event gathered a large number of intellectual, ambitious youth from all over the Kingdom and offered them the chance to showcase their ideas and work.

The theme of the evening was "Beyond the frame." It was presented through three categories, each aiming to deliver a different message through an artwork or a poem by eight participants.

Ward offers painters, writers, photographers and anyone in between the chance to submit their work freely, with no limitations on their age or the topics of their work.

The founder of the Ward project, 18-year-old Khalid Alqahtani, told Arab News: "We wanted art enthusiasts to grow with us by volunteering their skills in editing, translation and graphic design. I created a team of nine people, including myself.”

All of them are secondary school and university students from different disciplines and parts of the Kingdom.

“The main goal of Ward is to give art and literature lovers the opportunity to know the reasons behind the creation of a particular work of art,” Al-Gjahtani said. “I believe that art encompasses all forms of creativity.”

The evening was against the famous quote of "Explanation kills art" because when we hear a poem or a work vision we face endless possibilities for interpretation.

During the event the first printed issue of the magazine was launched for the first time as it is considered the seventh edition of the e-magazine.

Ward Magazine aims to remove the stereotypical ideas about the Saudi nation as a mere geographical border, and to prove that it has a wholly different perspective.

The magazine contains articles, poems and other collective artworks of ever-growing young talents.

Al-Ghahtani said: "We are trying to break down the obstacles that artists face in reaching their audiences, by creating solutions to make their art see the light, such as showcasing their works through exhibitions and electronic editions.”

The event took place at 3alsat7 in Alrawdah district.

Decoder

Ward and 3alsat7

Ward is an Arabic word referring literally to flowers and metaphorically to youth and beauty. 3alsat7 is an Arabic word for the English phrase "on the roof."


Art and the deal: market slump pushes galleries to the Gulf

Updated 16 February 2026
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Art and the deal: market slump pushes galleries to the Gulf

DOHA: With global sales mired in a slump, art dealers have turned to buyers in the oil-rich Gulf, where culture sector spending is on the rise.
Art Basel, which runs elite fairs in Miami, Hong Kong, Paris and Switzerland, held its Gulf debut in Qatar earlier this month.
“The second you land here, you see the ambition. It’s basically the future,” Andisheh Avini, a senior director at New York-based Gagosian Gallery, told AFP at the Doha fair.
“We see a lot of potential in this region and in Qatar,” Avini said, explaining it was “extremely important” for galleries to be exploring new consumer and collector bases.
“That’s why we’re here. And with patience and a long view, I think this is going to be a great hub,” he added.
A 2025 report on the global art market by Art Basel and the Swiss bank UBS showed sales fell across traditional centers in Europe and North America in the previous year.
Economic volatility and geopolitical tensions have weighed on demand, meaning global art market sales reached an estimated $57.5 billion in 2024 — a 12 percent year-on-year decline, the report said.
“The value of sales has ratcheted down for the past two years now, and I do think we’re at a bit of a turning point in terms of confidence and activity in the market,” Art Basel’s chief executive Noah Horowitz told AFP in Doha.

Prompted by a cooling global art market, particularly in North America and Europe, international art dealers are increasingly looking for buyers in the Gas-rich Gulf, where governments have also ramped up spending in the cultural sector. (Mahmud Hams / AFP) 
 


‘Time was right’

“Looking at developments in the global art world, we felt the time was right to enter the (Middle East, North Africa and South Asia) region,” he added.
Gulf states have poured billions into museums and cultural development to diversify their economies away from oil and gas and boost tourism.
In 2021, Abu Dhabi, home to the only foreign branch of the Louvre, announced a five-year plan for $6 billion in investments in its culture and creative industries.
Doha has established the National Museum of Qatar and the Museum of Islamic Art. The gas-rich country’s museums authority has in the past reported an annual budget of roughly $1 billion a year to spend on art.
Last year, Saudi Arabia announced that cultural investments in the Kingdom have exceeded $21.6 billion since 2016.
Gagosian had selected early works by Bulgarian artist Christo to feature at Art Basel Qatar.
Best known for large-scale works with his French partner Jeanne-Claude, like the wrapping of Paris’s Arc de Triomphe in 2021, Berlin’s Reichstag in 1995 and Pont Neuf in 1985, the Doha fair exhibited smaller wrapped sculptures.
Avini said the works had sparked curiosity from an “interesting mix” of individuals and potential buyers.
“Of course, you have the Qataris. You’re meeting other dealers, for instance, from Saudi and other parts of the region,” he said.
Among the Christo works were “Wrapped Oil Barrels,” created between 1958-61 shortly after the artist fled communist Bulgaria for Paris.

Art Basel, which runs elite fairs in Miami Beach, Hong Kong and Paris as well as Switzerland, held its Gulf debut earlier this month in gas-rich Qatar. (Mahmud Hams / AFP) 


‘Turn of the cycle’

The barrels — bound tightly with rope, their fabric skins stiffened and darkened with lacquer — inevitably recall the Gulf’s vast hydrocarbon wealth.
But Vladimir Yavachev, Christo’s nephew and now director for the artists’ estate following their deaths, said the barrels were not developed with “any connotation to the oil industry or criticism.”
“He really liked the proportion of this very simple, everyday object,” Yavachev said. “It was really about the aesthetics of the piece,” he added.
Horowitz said there had been an “evolution that we’ve seen through the growth of the market in Asia and here now in the Middle East.”
“With each turn of the cycle in our industry... we’ve seen new audiences come to the table and new content,” he added.
Hazem Harb, a Palestinian artist living between the UAE and Italy, praised Art Basel Qatar for its range of “international artists, so many concepts, so many subjects.”
Among Harb’s works at the fair were piles of old keys reminiscent of those carried during the “Nakba” in 1948, when around 760,000 Palestinians fled or were forced from their homes.
Next to them was a pile of newer keys — 3D-printed replicas of the key to Harb’s own apartment in Gaza, destroyed in the recent war.
In the Gulf and beyond, Harb said he thought there was a “revolution” happening in Arab art “from Cairo to Beirut to Baghdad to Kuwait... there is a new era, about culture, about art.”