US photographer Bobby Sager discusses images from his latest book, ‘Diriyah: Face to Face’  

US photographer Bobby Sager discusses images from his latest book, ‘Diriyah: Face to Face’  
'Being Human,' Bobby Sager. (Supplied)
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Updated 19 January 2024
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US photographer Bobby Sager discusses images from his latest book, ‘Diriyah: Face to Face’  

US photographer Bobby Sager discusses images from his latest book, ‘Diriyah: Face to Face’  

DUBAI: Two years ago, American portrait photographer Bobby Sager came to the sandy-toned, historical center of Diriyah, Riyadh, for a project. He was scheduled to stay for just a few days, but it didn’t work out that way.  

“I didn’t (initially) want to go to Saudi Arabia,” Sager tells Arab News from his base in Boston. “This isn’t the kind of thing I do — shooting an architectural wonder. But they convinced me to come for five days. I stayed for 72. And I’ve been back twice since.”  

Sager took hundreds of arresting cityscape and close-up shots of what was the Kingdom’s first capital, the centuries-old home of the Al-Saud family. Those pictures have been compiled in a large coffee-table book published by Rizzoli, entitled “Diriyah: Face to Face.”  




American portrait photographer Bobby Sager came to the sandy-toned, historical center of Diriyah, Riyadh, for a project. (Supplied)

“I describe it in the book as an intimate portrait of an epic place,” Sager says. “The thing that intrigued me was the intimacy that I felt in this extraordinary place. During those 72 days that I spent there, staring at walls or finding myself down some little alleyway, I was feeling the lives that have been lived there.” Sager was interested in attempting to capture the stories within the walls, as opposed to just their outer surfaces.   

He documented nooks and crannies, from dimly lit stairways to geometrically shaped windows and abstract ‘faces’ found on the wrinkly mud walls. For Sager, the project was all about looking closely at details.  

“It’s a beautiful place to photograph,” he says. “But my inspiration — and the reason I’ve spent so much time on it — is the challenge of finding ways to convey the humanity of the place.” 

Over the past two decades, Sager has traveled to various conflict zones, including Afghanistan, Palestine and Rwanda, encountering people from all walks of life and taking their portraits with a particular focus on their eyes.  

“Cameras allow me to connect with people. It’s a way of engaging and being more present,” he said. “Whether it’s images that are taken in different difficult places around the world or the Diriyah images, it’s basically a search for humanity.” 

‘Being Human’  

This is an exhibition that I did with the Global Citizen Forum in Ras Al-Khaimah in the UAE in 2023. This is the kind of photography that I usually do. The title of this exhibition was “Being Human,” because it’s a conversation about our common humanity. A lot of what I write about in “Diriyah: Face to Face” is the same thing. I don’t usually do things like the Diriyah project, but the common thread between the book and the portraits that I usually take is the humanity that I see.   

‘Greenery’  

I wanted to take this shot this way because I wanted to show the trees that were next to the buildings. The reason that Diriyah was founded in the first place was because of the wadis there. I write in the book that “the founders of Diriyah used their ability, the meager resources of the desert, and their profound connection to the natural world to conjure a city using the earth itself. With life-giving water and desert sand, they created a community that became the seed of a nation.” 

‘Kissing Face’ 

This is a close-up of the mud ‘faces’ in Diriyah, which are actually really small. It’s part of a whole conversation, which is: “Are you willing to commit the time and be present enough to really take a closer look, in a literal and figurative sense?” The faces aren’t like ghosts — they are meant to remind us that real people lived there. You can’t have Diriyah without having a community. At the bottom right, there is the profile of a beautiful woman. You can see her chin, her mouth, her nose, and she is kissing a man, who is looking straight ahead. This is actually an interaction between two mud faces. Above those two, in the upper left, there is an old man with an open mouth and bags under his eyes. He’s looking down at them disapprovingly, like he’s angry because they’re kissing.  

‘Shadows’ 

This landscape was largely built 300 years ago, which is a source of national pride, even identity, for Saudis. This image is very moody because of the shadows. There’s also an idea of time passing. All light is special, but what I found special in Diriyah was looking at the same ‘face’ in the mud at sunrise, high noon and sunset — over the course of 24 hours — and seeing how it would be changed by the light.  

‘Window’ 

This is just a beautiful shot. I wanted people to feel that people were living there. They use triangular windows in their detailed architecture. I could really feel the ingenuity of the people that made these shapes. I shot it this way because it almost felt like there was somebody home, as it’s night time and there’s a light on in the house.  

‘Sentinel’ 

This powerful mud face is so dramatically different than the other ones I saw. They’re usually small, like I said, but this angry-looking mud face is probably somewhere around 15 meters high. 

‘Stairway’ 

I really like this image of the stairway; it’s meant to lead you into the book. In order to get this shot I had to climb up high. 


Review: ‘Beverly Hills Cop: Axel F’  — the sequel nobody needed

Review: ‘Beverly Hills Cop: Axel F’  — the sequel nobody needed
Updated 08 July 2024
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Review: ‘Beverly Hills Cop: Axel F’  — the sequel nobody needed

Review: ‘Beverly Hills Cop: Axel F’  — the sequel nobody needed
  • Glossy update to beloved Eddie Murphy franchise falls flat

LONDON: There’s something wonderfully nostalgic about the opening minutes of “Beverly Hills Cop: Axel F,” as Eddie Murphy’s Axel Foley drives through his beloved Detroit on his way to a Red Wings game. Only, of course, Foley isn’t there to watch hockey — he’s actually there to catch a group of bad guys in his inimitable, maverick-cop fashion, racking up a huge property damage bill and getting chewed out by his beleaguered captain in the process. All the elements that made 1984’s “Beverly Hills Cop” such a hit are here: Glenn Frey’s “The Heat is On,” the familiar strains of “Axel F” by Harold Faltermeyer, Murphy’s improv-ish bluster, and some carefully choreographed set pieces. As the old saying goes, “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.”

It's advice that Australian director Mark Molloy (making his feature debut here) takes to heart. This fourth installment in the “Beverly Hills Cop” franchise leans heavily on its past — returning alongside Murphy are Judge Reinhold (as Billy), John Ashton (Taggart), Paul Reiser (Jeffrey) and Bronson Pinchot (Serge). And yes, it’s a blast seeing all these guys back together. Joining the cast are Joseph Gordon-Levitt as by-the-book cop Bobby Abbot, Kevin Bacon as Beverly Hills captain Cade Grant, and Taylour Paige as Jane, Foley’s estranged daughter, who finds herself targeted by a group of corrupt cops (the reason for Foley’s return to Los Angeles early in the movie).

Molloy does at least throw in some more up-to-date, high-octane action scenes (unfortunately complete with some shonky CGI), and hits Foley with a flurry of more-modern California stereotypes to poke fun at. Even Abbot makes fun of Foley’s outdated alpha-male approach to solving crimes, throwing in a joke about 1994’s poorly received “Beverly Hills Cop III” not being his finest hour. It’s standard, fish-out-of-water fare, brought up to date with a 2024 budget and a script that’s not afraid to make fun of itself.

Sadly, as 2021’s “Coming 2 America” proved, simply refreshing a tried-and-tested Eddie Murphy comedy staple doesn’t automatically make it good — or even particularly funny. So, while it’s entertaining to see familiar characters riff on each other’s grey hairs and failing bodies, there’s little of the zing and zip that made the original “Beverly Hills Cop” so captivating. Instead, it makes for a glossy, unnecessary, retread. Maybe, if it ain’t broke, leave it alone entirely.


MDLBEAST provides soundtrack to Esports World Cup 2024 in Riyadh

MDLBEAST provides soundtrack to Esports World Cup 2024 in Riyadh
Updated 08 July 2024
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MDLBEAST provides soundtrack to Esports World Cup 2024 in Riyadh

MDLBEAST provides soundtrack to Esports World Cup 2024 in Riyadh
  • Rappers Wiz Khalifa, Gunna, G-Eazy, Don Toliver, Jack Harlow among artists performing this month

RIYADH: Saudi music entertainment company MDLBEAST is staging a series of performances by international artists to coincide with the Esports World Cup 2024. 
AFT_r music shows will take place weekly over seven weeks until Aug. 15 at Boulevard Riyadh City.
The opening event featured performers such as Aly Fathallah, singer and producer Ckay, DJ Nooriyah, and rapper ElGrandeToto.
American rappers Wiz Khalifa, Gunna, G-Eazy, Don Toliver, and Jack Harlow will be among artists performing in coming weeks.
The lineup also features international DJs such as DJ Snake, R3HAB, and Sebastian Ingrosso.
“The launch of AFT_r shows with the supporting events of EWC, the largest event of its kind in the world, provides local audiences and visitors with an outstanding musical entertainment experience during this global event, strengthening the Kingdom’s regional and global position in esports, and music entertainment,” MDLBEAST CEO Ramadan Alharatani said.
The EWC tournament features a cross-game structure that pits the world’s top esports teams and athletes against one another for the competition’s largest-ever prize pool.
 


In Pakistan’s Quetta, traditional drinks are perfect cure for parched throats and scorching heat

In Pakistan’s Quetta, traditional drinks are perfect cure for parched throats and scorching heat
Updated 07 July 2024
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In Pakistan’s Quetta, traditional drinks are perfect cure for parched throats and scorching heat

In Pakistan’s Quetta, traditional drinks are perfect cure for parched throats and scorching heat
  • Locals turn to traditional sugarcane and apricot juices to beat the scorching heat in southwestern Pakistan
  • Juice sellers say despite soaring inflation, number of customers have almost doubled due to the heat wave

QUETTA: Come summer season, Hajji Baz Khan is a busy man. Eager to beat the heat and satiate their parched throats, hundreds of customers throng his shop daily for a tall glass of sugarcane juice. Khan repeatedly directs the servers at his shop to take customers’ orders, as the sound of a machine crushing the sugarcane for juice fills the air.
This is usually the scene at “Quetta Juice” shop on Jinnah Road, a busy place during summers in Pakistan’s southwestern city of Quetta. Pakistan has been in the grip of severe heat since May, with temperatures in the southern parts of the country soaring as high as 52 degrees Celsius. In Quetta, the temperature frequently crossed 40 degrees Celsius over the past few weeks.
And as the temperature rises, so does the number of customers at Quetta Juice to quench their thirst.
“Sometimes we face a shortage of glasses due to the large number of customers in the summer peak days,” Khan, 58, told Arab News. “Because people consider sugarcane juice as the source to beat the [high] temperature.”

Customers take sip of fresh juices at a local shop in Quetta on July 6, 2024. (AN Photo)

Sugarcane juice is a popular drink in Pakistan during the summer season. The juice is extracted on the spot by feeding sugarcane stalks into a machine, which is freshly squeezed out and served with ice cubes.
Pakistan’s macroeconomic crisis and double-digit inflation have made life for businesses difficult. Khan, who has been running the famous sugarcane juice shop since 1985, said he has to buy 40kg of sugarcane for Rs2500 ($9). And to make matters worse, the government has approved a surge in power tariffs.
“But yet my business is doing well, we are selling a single glass of sugarcane juice for 90 rupees ($0.32),” Khan said. “During the summer season, we use more than 100kg of sugar cane regularly for the traditional drink.”
Iftikhar Parvez, who traveled from Pakistan’s eastern city of Faisalabad to meet relatives in Quetta, couldn’t help but stop for sugarcane juice after visiting the nearby bazaar.
“In the summer season, the throat remains dry hence people prefer to drink sugarcane juice,” he said.
Wakeel Ahmed, a 44-year-old resident of Balochistan’s Sibi city who was visiting Quetta, said he had stopped for a sugarcane juice drink as he was suffering from low blood sugar.
The drink, he said, refreshed his mind and soul.
“Medically, sugarcane juice is very healthy for the human body and doctors always suggest it for hepatitis B and C patients,” Ahmed said.
‘KUSHTA’
While yogurt-based lassi, lemon sodas, milkshakes and fresh juices are popular in summer, another drink “kushta,” prepared with dried apricots and a mixture of salt and sugar, is also a much-relished beverage in Pakistan’s Balochistan province.
Ikram Ullah, 21, has been selling the drink for the last five years every summer.
“The residents love to drink apricot juice which gives me an earning of Rs3000 ($10.80) a single day,” he told Arab News.

An Apricot juice seller, Ikram Ullah, mixes his poplar juice in Quetta on July 6, 2024. (AN Photo)

“When there is any public activity in the city, I sell two 35-liter jars of apricot juice. But normally, I sell one.”
Taj Muhammad, a resident of the city’s Sariab Road, said he was roaming through the bazaar when he came across a pushcart selling kushta. That was enough of a temptation for him to stop and drink a glass of fresh apricot juice.
“There are dozens of pushcarts in Quetta from the main city center to the end of Sariab Road selling this traditional drink because the demand for this beverage increases in the summer season.” 

A vendor fills glasses with traditional sugar cane juice in Quetta on July 6, 2024. (AN Photo)

 


Rihanna flaunts jewelry by Qatari label in new Fenty Beauty campaign

Rihanna flaunts jewelry by Qatari label in new Fenty Beauty campaign
Updated 07 July 2024
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Rihanna flaunts jewelry by Qatari label in new Fenty Beauty campaign

Rihanna flaunts jewelry by Qatari label in new Fenty Beauty campaign

DUBAI: Fenty Beauty founder Rihanna unveiled the cosmetics brand’s latest campaign this week — and several of the snaps see the Barbadian superstar sporting rings by Qatari label Noudar Jewels.

Rihanna promoted the release of several new lip products in a sultry new campaign in which she sports a faux fur headpiece in a fiery shade of red. The pop superstar also shows off Noudar Jewels’ Henna Rings in the images.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by badgalriri (@badgalriri)

Founded by Noor Ali Hussain Alfardan, the label seeks to “combine influences from the timeless treasures of Arabian civilization with a modernist take on luxury jewelery,” according to the brand’s website.

Noudar Jewels is known for its incorporation of Omani patterns reminiscent of mosaic work and henna-style designs. The label has been flaunted by the likes of Taylor Swift, Jennifer Lopez, Kendall Jenner and more.

In June, Rihanna turned to the Asian subcontinent for her jewelry look as she showed off pieces by two celebrity-loved Indian fashion designers to launch her Fenty Hair line. The beauty mogul combined jewellery by Manish Malhotra and Sabyasachi Mukherjee in one look, which she showcased on the red carpet in Los Angeles.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by badgalriri (@badgalriri)

She wore a large choker with custom-cut rubies from Malhotra's High Jewellery collection and a three-stone pendant featuring rubellite stones from Sabyasachi's line.

The singer is known for sporting international designers and is a particular fan of one part-Arab footwear maven.

In January, Rihanna attended Dior’s couture show at Paris’s Musee Rodin while wearing shoes by her favored footwear designer, Romanian Jordanian Amina Muaddi. Rihanna showed off the Kim pumps from Muaddi’s eponymous brand. They are crafted in Italy from white patent-leather and have slim ankle straps punctuated with silver-tone buckles.

Barbados-born Rihanna is one of Muaddi’s most loyal fans.

She has championed her creations to lavish red-carpet events, fundraising galas, taking an off-duty stroll or stepping out to dinner.

In 2020, Muaddi helped design the shoes for Rihanna’s Fenty collection. The collaboration was so successful that it received the Collaborator of the Year award at the 34th edition of the FN Achievement Awards. 


How a Saudi couple’s passion for F1 made for a ‘spectacular’ wedding entrance

How a Saudi couple’s passion for F1 made for a ‘spectacular’ wedding entrance
Updated 06 July 2024
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How a Saudi couple’s passion for F1 made for a ‘spectacular’ wedding entrance

How a Saudi couple’s passion for F1 made for a ‘spectacular’ wedding entrance
  • Khashogji told Arab News that the decision to hold the wedding reception at the Jeddah F1 circuit “was a mutual decision” driven by the couple’s “love for unique experiences and cars in general”

RIYADH: Saudi newlyweds Abdulaziz Khashogji and Amirah Al-Bassam tied the knot in style as the first-ever couple to have their “zaffa,” or wedding entrance, on Jeddah’s F1 circuit.

“Both of us have unconventional ideas when it comes to our lifestyles,” the 32-year-old groom told Arab News.

“The shoot and the location were both iconic and really special; we’re both so grateful we made our night as special as our relationship,” 26-year-old bride added.

The Saudi newlyweds recently made their first entrance as husband and wife on a red 2024 Ferrari Roma Spider waving to their guests and driving across the Jeddah Corniche Circuit. (Supplied)

Last week, the newlyweds made their first entrance as husband and wife on a red 2024 Ferrari Roma Spider waving to their guests and driving across the Jeddah Corniche Circuit, famed as the fastest and longest street circuit in F1 at 6.175 km.

When approaching the planning of their reception and entrance, the couple’s vision was simple, with a slogan of “less is more.”

“I proposed the venue and Amirah thought it would be cool to just have a simple wedding dinner that was iconic. Adding the Ferrari for our entrance was the touch that made it extra special,” Khashogji said.

HIGHLIGHT

Photos and videos of the unique wedding reception has been circulating on social media, with many commenters showing interest and excitement over the extraordinary Saudi wedding entrance.

Photos and videos of the unique wedding reception circulated on social media over the weekend, with many commenters showing interest and excitement over the extraordinary Saudi wedding entrance.

When asked how the idea of the F1 wedding photo shoot came about, Al-Bassam said: “Given that the wedding reception was at the circuit, and my husband is a car and motorsport fanatic, it would have been rude not to,” she said.

“His lifelong passion is Formula 1 and his favorite manufacturer is Ferrari, so we had to do the shoot in a Ferrari at the F1 track,” she added.

A new benchmark for wedding venues has been set, and it’ll be a tough one to follow.

Zaid Khashogji, Relative

Khashogji told Arab News that the decision to hold the wedding reception at the Jeddah F1 circuit “was a mutual decision” driven by the couple’s “love for unique experiences and cars in general.”

The groom works in Saudi Motorsport and manages the circuit, hosting the F1 race along with the other events that take place at the track all year round.

“I’ve been with Saudi Motorsport since the first F1 race in 2021 as part of the hospitality team running premium hospitality. Since that day I knew I wanted to have my wedding in this venue, and when I met Amirah and fell in love with her, we both knew that it would be the perfect place for both of us,” he said.

There was some initial skepticism when the couple first told family and guests about the location they had in mind, Al-Bassam said.

“But everyone was blown away as soon as they showed up. The guests loved the venue, the idea, and everyone had an amazing time, which felt very rewarding to share our joy with everyone,” she added.

Rema Al-Yahya, a close friend of the bride, shared her experience of the unique ceremony. “I’ve never seen a wedding entrance like this before. It was really unexpected and everyone loved it. It was a truly memorable experience that perfectly captured the couple’s personality,” she said.

The groom’s brother, Zaid Khashogji said that the entrance was a “spectacle.”

He added: “For my brother it was a dream come true. Growing up, Aziz used to always say ‘Hawaii? Como? When I get married, it’ll be on an F1 track!

“Subhan Allah, he manifested it from a young age … back when the idea of having a Formula 1 track in Saudi Arabia was nothing more than wishful thinking! And it was amazing to see it happen in our hometown, no less.

“A new benchmark for wedding venues has been set, and it’ll be a tough one to follow!”