Curators behind Saudi Arabia’s Desert X AlUla 2024 discuss highlights of art event’s third edition

Curators behind Saudi Arabia’s Desert X AlUla 2024 discuss highlights of art event’s third edition
Jim Denevan, ‘Angle of Repose,’ Desert X AlUla 2022. (Lance Gerber, Courtesy of the Royal Commission for AlUla)
Short Url
Updated 09 January 2024
Follow

Curators behind Saudi Arabia’s Desert X AlUla 2024 discuss highlights of art event’s third edition

Curators behind Saudi Arabia’s Desert X AlUla 2024 discuss highlights of art event’s third edition

RIYADH: The landmark Desert X AlUla event is returning for its third edition. Staged within the vast desert region of AlUla in the northwest region of Saudi Arabia, the event will open on Feb. 9 and run until March 23 and present once again specially commissioned site-specific works by Saudi, Middle Eastern and international artists. 

This edition is presented under the theme “In the Presence of Absence.”      




Maya El Khalil, Desert X AlUla 2024 curator. (Courtesy of the Royal Commission for AlUla) 

Raneem Farsi and Neville Wakefield return as this year’s artistic directors while the exhibition will be curated by Maya El-Khalil, an art advisor and curator focusing on Middle Eastern art, and Marcello Dantas, a curator known for his unique interdisciplinary practices bringing together science, history and technology.  

“‘In the Presence of Absence’ confronts our tenuous place in the vast expanse of deep time, where the layers of life silently unfurl in space,” Dantas told Arab News. “The landscape offers the sensorial opportunity to craft art using the terrain as an instrument. Steeped in a rich history as a trade and cultural exchange hub, AlUla allows new narratives and perspectives of deep time, trade, and displacement to unfold.” 




Dana Awartani, Where The Dwellers Lay, Desert X AlUla 2022, photo by Lance Gerber. (Courtesy of the Royal Commission for AlUla)

A distinguishing factor of this year’s edition from the previous two editions is that it will be situated across three locations for the first time.  

“(The exhibition) will invite visitors to wander through and experience spectacular and varied landscapes as they weave their journey between works. Desert X AlUla works can be seen in the spectacular desert landscape of the Wadi AlFann desert, amongst the black lava stone terrain and breathtaking views of Harrat Uwayrid and by the AlManshiyah Railway Station which reveals the many layers of history and cultural confluence you find in AlUla,” El-Khalil told Arab News.  




Marcello Dantas, Desert X AlUla 2024 Curator. (Courtesy of the Royal Commission for AlUla)

Of pertinence to the 2024 exhibition, especially during the socio-economic and political challenges of present times, is the theme.  

“As visitors explore Desert X AlUla, they’ll discover that in times of uncertainty, when the tangible is elusive, nothing is more real than the presence of the invisible,” explained Dantas. “We invite visitors to encounter the limitless boundaries of imagination and discover the profound forces that silently shape our world.” 

The artworks, staged within the poignant and dreamy desert landscape of AlUla, attempt to transcend the viewer outside of “human-centric perspectives,” explained El-Khalil. “(The exhibition attempts) to explore alternative subjectivities and relations with newfound imagination and awe. Seeing the artists’ response to this theme in the spectacular locations of AlUla and how visitors respond to them is what I’m most excited about,” she added.  

Dantas and El-Khalil say the theme was inspired by the vastness of AlUla’s desert landscape, as well as its enigmatic nature.  

“Desert X AlUla 2024 begins with an acknowledgement: The desert’s vastness does not equate to emptiness, instead, it is alive with the unseen,” said El-Khalil. “AlUla exists on a scale of monumentality, yet many of the forces that shape the landscape are beyond the ordinary range of human perception.” 

Deserts, underlines Dantas, comprise a delicate interconnected system of both living, or biotic, and physical non-living, or abiotic, factors.  

“(They) shift between extremes with the daily rhythms of light and heat,” Dantas tells Arab News. “In recognizing this complexity, we must step into alternative subjectivities and sensibilities to find different ways of living. This encounter with the desert invites us to explore not only its vastness but also the intricacies that evade the human eye.” 

Ultimately, the upcoming edition of Desert X AlUIa aims to encourage visitors to relish the often overlooked and unseen aspects of the desert landscape.  

Through the works that will go on view in February, artists will engage with elements like air, heat, and water demonstrating “how the landscape is formed through mutually dependent motions of what conditions and what is conditioned,” explained Dantas.  


Riyadh International Book Fair promises celebration of literature

Riyadh International Book Fair promises celebration of literature
Updated 17 September 2024
Follow

Riyadh International Book Fair promises celebration of literature

Riyadh International Book Fair promises celebration of literature
  • Fair will host writers, thinkers, and intellectuals from Saudi Arabia and beyond, making it a pivotal literary platform in the region
  • Mohammed Hasan Alwan: The fair offers visitors a unique intellectual and cultural experience, incorporating the latest technologies and digital solutions

JEDDAH: Saudi Arabia’s Literature, Publishing and Translation Commission is gearing up for the 2024 Riyadh International Book Fair, which is set to take place from Sept. 26 to Oct. 5 at King Saud University in Riyadh.

With about 2,000 local, Arab and international publishing houses and agencies from more than 30 countries adorning 800 booths, this year’s fair promises to be a celebration of literature, knowledge, and creativity.

The fair will host writers, thinkers, and intellectuals from Saudi Arabia and beyond, making it a pivotal literary platform in the region.

Qatar will be the guest of honor at the fair. The rich cultural and intellectual legacy of the country will be on display through a dedicated pavilion featuring rare manuscripts and publications from Qatar’s Ministry of Culture.

Leading literary and artistic luminaries, alongside key organizations from Qatar’s cultural landscape, will feature at the event.

Mohammed Hasan Alwan, the CEO of the commission, said that the fair illustrated the unwavering support for cultural endeavors in Saudi Arabia.

He told Arab News: “The fair offers visitors a unique intellectual and cultural experience, incorporating the latest technologies and digital solutions. Attendees can discover thousands of new releases across various fields and enjoy a wide range of activities and events within the diverse cultural program, featuring prominent cultural figures from Saudi Arabia and beyond.

“This makes the 2024 edition a truly inspiring cultural journey, building on the successes of previous editions.”

This year’s fair boasts a dedicated business zone, with participation from literary agencies managing authors’ works and contracts, and with printing presses offering services to publishers. Additionally, there will be government and financial institution booths related to the publishing business sector.

The zone will host special sessions and workshops on topics such as entrepreneurship, licensing and copyright.

The fair will also feature a children’s area brimming with literary, cultural, and entertainment activities aimed at igniting the spark of curiosity in the young generation.

By championing local authors, providing a platform for self-published works, and offering a diverse range of cultural activities, the fair reflects the Kingdom’s efforts to nurture creativity and promote literary innovation.

The fair’s diverse cultural and intellectual activities are to be hosted in partnership with the Cultural Channel.

The program includes dialogue sessions, workshops, poetry evenings, and concerts and artistic performances designed to enrich the cultural sector, foster knowledge and promote reading as a way of life, while contributing to the sustainability of the cultural and intellectual renaissance underway in Saudi society.


Dubai gallery to host Andy Warhol exhibition ‘The Glam Factory’

Dubai gallery to host Andy Warhol exhibition ‘The Glam Factory’
Updated 17 September 2024
Follow

Dubai gallery to host Andy Warhol exhibition ‘The Glam Factory’

Dubai gallery to host Andy Warhol exhibition ‘The Glam Factory’

DUBAI: Artworks by late pop art icon Andy Warhol will be displayed in the UAE as part of “The Glam Factory” exhibition at the Foundry gallery in Dubai.

Curated by Nada Ghandour, “The Glam Factory” highlights Warhol, a prominent American artist in the 1960s known for his pop art style. “Campbell’s Soup Cans,” “Marilyn Monroe” and “Banana” are among his most famous pieces.

In an interview with Arab News, Heritage Curator Nada Ghandour described the exhibition as a “new reading of Andy Warhol’s work through the lens of our digital era and here in Dubai.”

Warhol moved to New York City in 1949 to pursue his American Dream and become rich and famous, said Ghandour.

“People today come to Dubai to also live out this dream. The American dream is more about opportunity and prosperity, and we know that many people today are moving to Dubai because it is a destination for stability and growth,” she explained.

Inspired by Warhol’s workshop “The Silver Factory,” Ghandour named the exhibition “The Glam Factory,” paying homage to his artistic process.

To draw a portrait, she explained, Warhol would take about 150 photos. He would then choose small parts from each photo and mix them together.

“He was capable of doing the job of a plastic surgeon; this was the glamorous and beautiful aspect of it,” she said.

Ghandour described Warhol as an artistic and technological visionary.

“Warhol was ahead of his time and was describing the artificial intelligence that we know now,” she said.

If he were alive now, she added, “he would speak to AI to create something in collaboration with a computer.”

The collection features over 100 of Warhol’s original pieces including screen prints, photos and magazine illustrations.

Located at the Foundry art space in Downtown Dubai, “The Glam Factory” exhibition is set to run from Sept. 20 to Oct. 31 of this year.


Mona Zaki-starring ‘Flight 404’ chosen as Egypt’s Oscars submission

Mona Zaki-starring ‘Flight 404’ chosen as Egypt’s Oscars submission
Updated 17 September 2024
Follow

Mona Zaki-starring ‘Flight 404’ chosen as Egypt’s Oscars submission

Mona Zaki-starring ‘Flight 404’ chosen as Egypt’s Oscars submission

DUBAI: Egyptian actress Mona Zaki and the Egyptian Film Syndicate announced this week that the film “Flight 404” will be Egypt’s official submission for the Best International Feature Film category at the 2025 Academy Awards.

This means that the film will be considered for the shortlist. If the movie gets shortlisted, it could then get nominated for an Academy Award.

The movie tells the story of Ghada, who, just days before her Hajj pilgrimage, is confronted with an emergency that requires a large sum of money. Forced to seek help, she must turn to individuals from a troubled past she had promised to leave behind.

Besides Zaki, the film, directed by filmmaker Hani Khalifa and scripted by Mohamed Ragaa, stars actors Mohamed Farag, Mohamed Mamdouh, Shereen Reda, Khaled El-Sawy, Mohamed Alaa, Hassan Al-Adl, Sama Ibrahim, Shadi Alfons, Rana Raies, Gihan El-Shamashergy and Arfa Abdel Rassoul.

The Oscar’s 97th edition is set to take place on March 3, 2025, at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles. 

Key dates for the 2025 submissions and voting were announced earlier this year. The deadline for general entries and Best Picture submissions is Thursday, Nov. 14. Preliminary voting for shortlists in ten categories will occur between Dec. 9-13, with the results to be revealed on Dec. 17. The nominations voting period will run from Jan. 8-12, and the official nominations will be announced on Friday, Jan. 17—a shift from the usual earlier-in-the-week schedule.

Last year, Egypt selected Mohamed Farag-starring “Voy Voy Voy!” as its entry for the Oscars’ Best International Feature Film award, while Yemen selected director Amr Gamal’s “The Burdened” and Tunisia competed with Kaouther Ben Hania’s “Four Daughters.” Morocco selected Asmae El-Moudir’s documentary “The Mother of All Lies.” 

Jordan submitted Amjad Al-Rasheed’s movie “Inshallah a Boy” and Palestine submitted Lina Soualem’s documentary “Bye Bye Tiberias.” 

None of the films won at the 2024 Oscars, though “Four Daughters” was nominated for Best Documentary Feature, a category ultimately won by “20 Days in Mariupol.” This marked a historic moment for director Kaouther Ben Hania, as she became the first Arab woman to receive a second Oscar nomination.


Jude Benhalim jewels spotted in ‘Emily in Paris’

Jude Benhalim jewels spotted in ‘Emily in Paris’
Updated 17 September 2024
Follow

Jude Benhalim jewels spotted in ‘Emily in Paris’

Jude Benhalim jewels spotted in ‘Emily in Paris’

DUBAI: Egyptian jewelry label Jude Benhalim gets a starring role in the latest season of Netflix’s hit series “Emily in Paris.”

Throughout multiple scenes, the Cairo-based label’s pieces are featured prominently on several characters in different episodes.

In episode six of season five, the Ripple Ring in gold is seen on Emily Cooper, portrayed by Lily Collins. Also in episode six, Camille’s mother, Louise, played by Camille Japy, shines in the Droplet Earrings in white.

Additionally, Mindy Chen, brought to life by Ashley Park, is spotted wearing the Elea Hoops in the same episode.

Mindy Chen, brought to life by Ashley Park, is spotted wearing the Elea Hoops. (Supplied)

Earlier in the season, Melia Kreilling, who plays Sofia, is seen showcasing the Sahara Mixed Earrings in episode four.

Benhalim, who is part-Libyan and part-Syrian and grew up in Egypt, founded her eponymous brand in 2011 when she was just 17 and has since gone on to release a number of lines that each pay tribute to her heritage, finding fans in a handful of celebrities


Peggy Gou, Teddy Swims round out Abu Dhabi F1 concerts

Peggy Gou, Teddy Swims round out Abu Dhabi F1 concerts
Updated 17 September 2024
Follow

Peggy Gou, Teddy Swims round out Abu Dhabi F1 concerts

Peggy Gou, Teddy Swims round out Abu Dhabi F1 concerts

DUBAI: US singer and song-writer Teddy Swims and South Korean DJ and singer Peggy Gou have been announced as the final artists for the 16th edition of the Formula 1 Etihad Airways Abu Dhabi Grand Prix at the 2024 Yasalam after-race concerts, headlining the opening day on Dec. 5.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by Yasalam (@yasalamae)

 Swims, 31, who blends genres including R&B, soul, country and pop, will take to the stage at Etihad Park and will perform some of his biggest hits including “Lose Control.”

 Gou will then perform and close out the first evening of concerts. She will play some of her best-known hits including “It Makes You Forget” (Itgehane), “Starry Night,” “Jigoo” (with US house music legend Maurice Fulton), “Nabi” (with fellow Korean artist OHHYUK) and “Go.” 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by Yasalam (@yasalamae)

The rest of the line-up includes US pop rock band Maroon 5, who appear on Dec. 6, US rapper Eminem who will perform on Dec. 7, and British rock group Muse, who will hit the stage on Dec. 8.

Access to the after-race concerts is exclusive to Abu Dhabi Formula One Grand Prix ticket holders.