Local, international artists showcase experimental works in Riyadh

Suhailah Benadim, a Moroccan American artist, highlighted the similarities between Najdi and Moroccan architecture in her research. (AN photo)
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Updated 10 January 2024
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Local, international artists showcase experimental works in Riyadh

  • 15 Intermix Residency artists explored intersections between fashion and art over 10 weeks

RIYADH: Several Saudi and international artists displayed experimental artworks created from various natural materials including palm fiber, wood and rubber in Riyadh recently.

The 15 artists who participated in the second Intermix Residency titled “Art and Fashion Reimagined” showcased their work for two days in the Jax district in Diriyah.

The initiative is a collaboration between the Ministry of Culture’s Fashion Commission and Visual Arts Commission, which allowed the 15 artists to develop their projects over 10 weeks, focusing on the intersection between art and fashion. 

“This residency was life changing. It’s what I was always looking for … the support that we received from the directors and the assistants was very helpful and the people we were surrounded by were very diverse,” artist Suhailah Benadim told Arab News. 

Benadim, a Moroccan-American artist, has been a Riyadh resident for the past 17 years. During the residency, she highlighted the similarities between Najdi and Moroccan architecture in her research. 




Moroccan artist Mohammed Amine El-Makouti placed fluorescent colors and ultraviolet lights at the base of his work. (AN photo)

“I did it from a narrative of a third-culture child’s perspective because there’s always a perpetual search for home — so I kind of created my own home elements,” she told Arab News. 

Benadim used madder root, longwood shavings, and cutch extract to handprint and dye the base of the natural textiles. She designed versions of her metaphorical home in the center of each draping using the Indonesian Batik technique of wax-resist dyeing. 

One of the pieces has a structure that emulates the exteriors of Najdi homes, with Moroccan elements in the center. Some of the interiors are inspired by houses in her father’s neighborhood, including metal artwork on doors and triangles that represent airways in old mud houses. 

Saudi artist Maisa Shaldan takes a psychological and philosophical approach to her practice. At Intermix, she showcased an immersive cocoon-like installation, made with repurposed palm fibers that are usually discarded.

“I came into the residency with this question: Is this a material we can actually use as fashion or furniture designers?” she said. 




Saudi graphic designer Reema Hamad’s lab-like, interactive artwork allows people to view and touch it. (AN photo)

She combined her understanding of the fibers’ nature with a notion of people needing shelter for containment and growth. 

Shaldan said: “When someone has lost all their energy, they need to be reborn, or to hide within the womb of something to be born again. And that’s where the idea of the cocoon came from.

“Within the bustle of the city, we need self-withdrawal so we can strengthen and remerge.”

Moroccan artist Mohammed Amine El-Makouti placed fluorescent colors and ultraviolet lights at the base of his work. His project hopes to make sense of the body’s relationship with time and space. 




Saudi fashion designer Bashayer Al-Hatmi created a piece showcasing the sea life of Farasan Island. (AN photo)

His two wall installations are video projections of a self-performance inspired by folk dances. He uses layers of mesh to bring the video performance alive with multiple dimensions. They are framed with fluorescent poles placed in abstract geometric patterns derived from Islamic architecture and his cultural heritage. 

“The work is analyzing the self through the body, giving it another dimension, and exploring its rebirth … I’m always interested to mix between art, science and technology,” El-Makouti told Arab News.

Saudi graphic designer, Reema Hamad, sought to explore the role of skin as both a barrier to the physical world and a canvas, or living textile, for art.

“I made a fabric close to the human skin and human skin contains collagen fibers … and the materials that I use are from rubber trees and that texture that represents our inner self,” Hamad said. 




Hamad’s artwork featured the artist wearing a piece of her own fiber that was meant to resemble human skin, and photographs were hidden beneath the microscope. (AN photo)

Her lab-like, interactive artwork allows people to view and touch it. She has miniature photographs that can be viewed under a microscope, and others of her wearing pieces of her own skin-like fiber.

“I adore visual art because, as a graphic designer, it’s all about expression. Like, I think it’s crucial to express oneself rather than merely convey a clear point.” 

Saudi fashion designer, Bashayer Al-Hatmi, participated with a piece showcasing the sea life of Farasan Island in Jizan.

“I met Umm Ahmed, an 85-year-old Farasani woman who inherited her mother’s bead craft from her and taught it to her children and their offspring. In my artwork, I aimed to highlight regional crafts and document that culture,” Al-Hatmi said. 

Her artwork features a mannequin with a dress fashioned from beaded textiles that represent the sea’s ecosystem, and is filled with seawater from Farasan Island.

The Intermix Residency also showcased the work of artists Ismail Odetola, Albandari Aljuaid, Oceane Sailly, Ella Strattmiller, Johanna Stella Rogalla, Somaya Alsayed, Tahra Al-Alshaikh, Nada Qari, Nehal Alaqeel and Andrea Alkalay.


Leading Saudi science, engineering students to compete in world fair

Updated 10 May 2024
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Leading Saudi science, engineering students to compete in world fair

  • 35 students selected from 210,000 candidates this year
  • Mitigating dust build-up on solar panels is a top project

RIYADH: Thirty-five Saudi Arabia students will compete in the Regeneron International Science and Engineering Fair 2024 in Los Angeles from May 10 to 18, the Saudi Press Agency reported on Friday.

They will join 1,700 other participants from 70 countries in the ISEF, which is recognized as a pre-college competition in scientific research and innovation. The Kingdom will be led by representatives from the King Abdulaziz and His Companions Foundation for Giftedness and Creativity, or Mawhiba, and the Ministry of Education.

The Kingdom’s team was selected from over 210,000 candidates earlier this year by experts and specialists linked to Mawhiba. Their projects underwent rigorous evaluation during the “Ibdaa” National Olympiad for Scientific Creativity, culminating in the selection of 180.

Thirty-five talented students were nominated to represent the Kingdom in the ISEF from the 45 students whose projects qualified for the Olympiad’s finals, the SPA reported.

Among these students is Areej Al-Qarni, who will showcase her research focused on mitigating dust accumulation on solar panels. This is a problem that leads to energy and financial losses amounting to millions of dollars.

Al-Qarni explained that her research is aimed at developing sustainable solutions to this global issue, to conserve energy and ensure financial viability for crucial projects.

Areej Al-Qarni will showcase her research focused on mitigating dust accumulation on solar panels. (SPA)

Mawhiba has emphasized that the students chosen to represent the Kingdom underwent rigorous training conducted by both local and international academics and experts across various disciplines, the SPA reported.

The Kingdom is a primary sponsor of the ISEF 2024 exhibition, offering prizes for innovative projects in science, technology, engineering and mathematics, or STEM. These prizes include full scholarships for undergraduate studies at King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals, and participation in the Mawhiba Universal Enrichment Program.

This year marks the Kingdom’s 18th-consecutive participation in the ISEF. Saudi Arabia students have at previous fairs won 133 awards, including 92 grand prizes and 41 special distinctions.


KSrelief sends food and shelter aid to Pakistan and Sudan

Updated 10 May 2024
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KSrelief sends food and shelter aid to Pakistan and Sudan

RIYADH: The Kingdom’s aid agency KSrelief has sent food and shelter aid to Pakistan and Sudan, the Saudi Press Agency reported on Friday.

A total of 450 shelter bags were distributed in Sudan’s El-Gadarif state, benefiting 2,588 individuals.

In Pakistan’s Pakhtunkhwa province 710 food baskets for 4,970 individuals were handed to vulnerable families in flood-affected areas. This was a part KSrelief’s Food Security Support Project in Pakistan 2024.


World Red Cross, Red Crescent day marked with conferences, exhibitions

Updated 10 May 2024
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World Red Cross, Red Crescent day marked with conferences, exhibitions

  • Event is celebrated worldwide every May 8 to highlight the life-saving role played by the organizations

RIYADH: The Saudi Red Crescent Authority marked World Red Cross and Red Crescent Day this week with various events, exhibitions and conferences in the Kingdom.

The SRCA’s activities included marches on the main roads of several governorates as well as lectures and training courses to raise community awareness.

The day is celebrated on May 8 every year to emphasize the importance of alleviating the suffering of people worldwide, especially in countries afflicted by conflict and natural disasters.

In the Eastern Province, the SRCA in collaboration with Alasala College in Dammam, held a series of awareness events on the vital humanitarian work carried out by both organizations.

Those attending had the opportunity to observe medical workers undertake a drill using ambulances for emergencies under difficult circumstances.

There was also an exhibition featuring the latest emergency medical equipment and information provided when using the hotline number 997.

Lectures were delivered on topics including risks associated with overcrowding, the importance of allowing unimpeded access for ambulances, and guidelines for handling different emergency situations.

Visitors were also introduced to volunteering opportunities, training programs, and the Family Links initiative.

In the northwestern province of Tabuk, the SRCA’s Director-General Nawaf bin Mayah Al-Anazi led the celebration, with awareness programs and skills training at Tabuk Park Mall.

(With SPA)


Saudi Ministry of Tourism closes 40 facilities in Asir region for various violations

Updated 10 May 2024
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Saudi Ministry of Tourism closes 40 facilities in Asir region for various violations

  • Tourism operators had been warned of heavy penalties if they do business before obtaining the necessary licenses.

ABHA: The Saudi Ministry of Tourism recorded more than 350 violations during its inspection tours of hospitality facilities in the Asir region, closing 40 of them.
It addressed about 270 complaints regarding the services provided in facilities such as hotels and serviced apartments, as part of the Our Guests Are A Priority campaign during the first quarter of 2024.
The ministry’s supervisory teams conducted about 650 supervisory and inspection tours of hospitality facilities.
The tours were part of ongoing efforts to enhance the tourism sector in all regions of the Kingdom, in addition to ensuring the quality of services provided by various types of hospitality facilities to visitors and tourists.
The ministry said it would impose the strictest penalties on those who engaged in activities before obtaining the necessary licenses. It also said it would not be lenient in imposing regulatory penalties on violators, the closure of the facility in question, or both penalties in some cases.


KSrelief provides free eye treatment in Sri Lanka

Updated 10 May 2024
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KSrelief provides free eye treatment in Sri Lanka

  • 8-day mission in cooperation with the International Sight Foundation

COLOMBO: The Kingdom’s aid agency KSrelief has provided 200 eye surgeries in its ongoing campaign in the Sri Lanka town of Kattankudy, the Saudi Press Agency reported on Thursday.

Staffers of the “Saudi Noor Volunteer Program to Combat Blindness” have also examined 2,000 individuals so far.

The campaign, in cooperation with the International Sight Foundation, started May 4 and will conclude on May 11, the SPA stated.

The mission is a part of KSrelief’s aid efforts in several countries worldwide.