American-French filmmaker Roman Hill discusses his installation ‘Inflow:Outflow’ 

Roman Hill’s “Inflow:Outflow” consisted of two 15x7-meter projections in Riyadh’s STC metro station. (Supplied)
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Updated 18 December 2025
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American-French filmmaker Roman Hill discusses his installation ‘Inflow:Outflow’ 

RIYADH: For filmmaker and artist Roman Hill, Noor Riyadh — the festival of light art which took place this year from Nov. 20 to Dec. 6 under the theme “In the Blink of an Eye” — is “a rare opportunity to create truly monumental, immersive work.”  

Hill’s “Inflow:Outflow” consisted of two 15x7-meter projections in Riyadh’s STC metro station. He described it in a statement to Arab News as “a visual poem” that “celebrates universal movement.” 

“At every moment, everything — from the cells in our bodies to the microorganisms around us, and all the way up to the stars and galaxies — is engaged in a continuous dance of creation and destruction,” Hill elaborated. 

His installation, according to the Noor Riyadh website, “translates microscopic realities into monumental projections. Illumination magnifies chemical reactions filmed through polarized light, expanding them to an architectural scale. Color and textures cascade like slow galaxies, enveloping surfaces in living pigment. 

“By revealing the sublime within the small, the work bridges science and mysticism,” it continues. “Hill’s imagery, neither abstract nor representational, invites contemplation of unseen beauty.” 

The theme of this year’s festival “resonates” with his work, Hill said, “because it reminds us that, in a single instant, we are both observing and participating in this vast cosmic choreography.  

“The installation invites viewers to feel themselves at the center of this dance, even if only for a moment of heightened attention,” he continued. “For me, that moment of contemplation — like suddenly noticing a sunrise or a sky full of stars — is where an artwork truly stays with somebody. 

“This fascination with light and the universe is at the core of my practice, and runs through many of my projects,” he added. 

Indeed, he has just finished directing a new French series for European TV channel ARTE telling “the entire history of the universe — from the Big Bang to the very end of time — through the voice of light itself,” which he hopes to have dubbed into Arabic. All the imagery was created in Hall’s studio “using only physical and chemical phenomena, without CGI or AI.” 

Light art, Hall said, is “universal, immediate, and speaks to people beyond language or cultural background.” He believes Noor Riyadh is playing an important cultural role. 

“It brings together artists from many continents and very different cultures and places them in dialogue with Saudi artists … This mix, and the scale of the festival, make it one of the most exciting platforms for light-based work today.” 


Inside the third Diriyah Contemporary Art Biennale  

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Inside the third Diriyah Contemporary Art Biennale  

  • What visitors can expect from ‘In Interludes and Transitions,’ which runs until May 2 

RIYADH: The third Diriyah Contemporary Art Biennale, which runs until May 2, features works by more than 70 artists from across the globe, exploring themes of movement, migration, and transition.  

Artistic directors Nora Razian and Sabih Ahmed worked with a group of curators on the biennale, titled “In Interludes and Transitions,” to explore the intersections of geographies, histories and cultures that have connected the Arab region to the world while centering the main motif of procession.  

The biennale is divided into five galleries, as well as various activations, installations and performances.  

Petrit Halilaj's 'Very volcanic over this green feather.' (AN/ Huda Bashatah)

In the show’s Disjointed Choreographies gallery, artists “grapple with their relationships to the past, celebrate the legacy of historical and cultural figures, and tell the stories that shape their worlds.Here, the past does not recede, but strides alongside the present,” the show catalogue states.  

In Disjointed Choreographies, Kosovan artist Petrit Halilaj revisits drawings he made as a child in a refugee camp in Albania, remembering both the beauty and violence around him, in his installation “Very volcanic over this green feather,” while Puerto Rican artist Daniel Lind-Ramo’s cast of assembled sculptures celebrates the enduring bond of a community. Together the works in this gallerycelebrate the collective over the individual. 

Rajesh Chaitya Vangad's untitled work. (Supplied)

In the A Hall of Chants gallery, Ahmed said during a media tour of the biennale, “we’re looking at who the voices are and how muted or amplified we allow them to be. We want to invoke the various voices we’re surrounded by.” He added that Gayatri Spivak's original essay “Can the Subaltern Speak?” was a reference point through which to pose questions: “Are we listening? When do we choose to listen and when do we not? Whose voices become noise, and whose voices remain voices? These often change in history and over time,” he said.  

Although the biennale’s focus is on global movements, the artistic directors have approached the subject choreographically instead of cartographically.  

Pio Abad's 'Vanwa.' (AN/ Huda Bashatah)

For example, in Rajesh Chaitya Vangad’s untitled work, created in the Warli style of painting, we see a choreography of community: a procession of people in celebration, others seeking refuge, children playing, birds flying, rivers flowing, worshippers chanting, the phases of the moon changing. The more you look, the more voices you hear.  

Saudi artist Mohammad Al-Ghamdi mixes his interest in mechanics with traditional artifacts such as doors and windows to form something akin to an aerial image in his untitled mixed media on wood works. Here, discarded items become a language to translate the continuously changing nature of Earth and its cultures.  

Also using earthly items to form a literal language is Filipino artist Pio Abad. His installation “Vanwa” consists of letters carved out of mud bricks created from sand from Riyadh to assemble a traditional poem in Ivatan, a language that is becoming minoritized within the Philippines. Translated, it reads: “Bury me under your fingernails/That I may be eaten along with every food you eat/That I may be drunk along with every cup of water you drink.” 

Ahmed explained: “We wanted it to be in a scenographic conversation with the valley, Wadi Hanifa (which can be seen behind the work), almost as if the Earth is asking us ‘Are we reading between the lines?’” 

The A Collective Observation gallery focuses on diverse knowledge systems and technologies that “shape how we sense the world, from interpreting the cosmic and the geologic, to reading data points and Al-generated models,” examining “the tools and concepts through which we orient ourselves in the present, querying their … infallibility,” the catalogue states. 

In the gallery A Forest of Echoes, there are processions that are poetic, mythological, spiritual, as well as microbial. The catalogue bills it as “a polyphonous transmission of enlivened pasts and possible futures.” 

“Forests are various microhabitats jostling with each other. It’s various forms of life —airborne, landborne, and waterborne — sometimes in generative and regenerative relationships, but sometimes in violent and parasitical relationships. Those are the densities we wanted to include of various ecosystems and microhabitats the artworks themselves are trying to produce,” Ahmed said.  

If we think of the world sonically, he explained, echoes become time capsules that carry singular and collective selves, carry them out, reverberate, and bring them back to us. In that sense, the exhibition also tackles time and coincidence of the past and the present.  

Saudi artist Faisal Samra’s commissioned work “Immortal Moment III,” for example, contemplates his position in the world within cosmic time. On a tent cloth, he performs gestures and improvised choreography to paint a physical representation of abstracted human action.  

Oscar Santillan’s “Anthem,” meanwhile, centralizes tree tumors as a main motif that responds to sounds produced by visitors to create animal-like noises, complemented by AI and synthetic biology, while Shadia Alem’s “Transformation Jinniyat Lar” is a series of acrylic paintings of female Jinns drawing from local and regional folklore that depicts them as custodians and protectors of the river Lar. 

Throughout the biennale, Ahmed said, “we want to invoke processions that are planetary; the sandstorms, the hurricanes, the tectonic plates moving: all of that level of procession, as well as procession that’s social, which means processions of people moving together, having to move by circumstance or by choice, sometimes due to displacement, and sometimes (to seek) better opportunities.”