Saudi Architecture Map decodes Asir’s art of adaptation
Saudi Architecture Map decodes Asir’s art of adaptation/node/2596316/art-culture
Saudi Architecture Map decodes Asir’s art of adaptation
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The launch of the Saudi Architecture Map is a milestone in promoting the distinct architectural styles of the Kingdom, including those of Asir region. (SPA)
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The launch of the Saudi Architecture Map is a milestone in promoting the distinct architectural styles of the Kingdom, including those of Asir region. (SPA)
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The launch of the Saudi Architecture Map is a milestone in promoting the distinct architectural styles of the Kingdom, including those of Asir region. (SPA)
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The launch of the Saudi Architecture Map is a milestone in promoting the distinct architectural styles of the Kingdom, including those of Asir region. (SPA)
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The launch of the Saudi Architecture Map is a milestone in promoting the distinct architectural styles of the Kingdom, including those of Asir region. (SPA)
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The launch of the Saudi Architecture Map is a milestone in promoting the distinct architectural styles of the Kingdom, including those of Asir region. (SPA)
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The launch of the Saudi Architecture Map is a milestone in promoting the distinct architectural styles of the Kingdom, including those of Asir region. (SPA)
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The launch of the Saudi Architecture Map is a milestone in promoting the distinct architectural styles of the Kingdom, including those of Asir region. (SPA)
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The launch of the Saudi Architecture Map is a milestone in promoting the distinct architectural styles of the Kingdom, including those of Asir region. (SPA)
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The launch of the Saudi Architecture Map is a milestone in promoting the distinct architectural styles of the Kingdom, including those of Asir region. (SPA)
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The launch of the Saudi Architecture Map is a milestone in promoting the distinct architectural styles of the Kingdom, including those of Asir region. (SPA)
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The launch of the Saudi Architecture Map is a milestone in promoting the distinct architectural styles of the Kingdom, including those of Asir region. (SPA)
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The launch of the Saudi Architecture Map is a milestone in promoting the distinct architectural styles of the Kingdom, including those of Asir region. (SPA)
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The launch of the Saudi Architecture Map is a milestone in promoting the distinct architectural styles of the Kingdom, including those of Asir region. (SPA)
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The launch of the Saudi Architecture Map is a milestone in promoting the distinct architectural styles of the Kingdom, including those of Asir region. (SPA)
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The launch of the Saudi Architecture Map is a milestone in promoting the distinct architectural styles of the Kingdom, including those of Asir region. (SPA)
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The launch of the Saudi Architecture Map is a milestone in promoting the distinct architectural styles of the Kingdom, including those of Asir region. (SPA)
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The launch of the Saudi Architecture Map is a milestone in promoting the distinct architectural styles of the Kingdom, including those of Asir region. (SPA)
Saudi Architecture Map decodes Asir’s art of adaptation
In Asir, ancient homes, forts, and castles have withstood the test of time, adapting to harsh climatic conditions such as heavy rainfall through innovative architectural practices
Structures are distinguished by their high-quality construction, and aesthetic execution that aligns with the surrounding environment’s requirements
Updated 08 April 2025
Arab News
RIYADH: The recent launch of the Saudi Architecture Map by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman is a milestone in promoting the distinct architectural styles of the Kingdom, including those of Asir region.
In this region, ancient homes, forts, and castles have withstood the test of time, adapting to harsh climatic conditions such as heavy rainfall through innovative architectural practices, the Saudi Press Agency reported.
The structures are distinguished by their high-quality construction, and aesthetic execution that aligns with the surrounding environment’s requirements. They demonstrate how early architects ingeniously designed elements that combined beauty and protection.
Saudi Architecture Map features 19 architectural styles inspired by various regions’ geographical and cultural characteristics.
It provides detailed insights into the architectural patterns, including for Asir, accompanied by design guidelines to enhance the overall quality of urban design within the built environment, particularly to express the site’s regional character.
The design guidelines help elevate architectural form and the design of public spaces. One of their primary objectives is to trace architectural roots applicable to contemporary buildings, ensuring they resonate with their historical context while drawing from local culture and highlighting the spirit of the place.
This approach seeks to balance sustainability and renovation and to connect architectural structures to the land’s natural features and topography.
Over the decades, hundreds of buildings in Asir have been restored and rehabilitated, some following scientific guidelines, while others have been carried out haphazardly.
The maps are therefore essential to establish correct frameworks that bridge the past and present while preserving architectural identity.
The significance of the maps lies in the spatial documentation of architecture throughout the Kingdom.
It shows the distinct architecture of each region based on its geographic, cultural, and climatic characteristics.
In essence, the map reflects traditional building methods and illustrates how these can be integrated into modern architectural designs, contributing to the sustainability of these styles within the contemporary urban landscape of Saudi Arabia.
Authors, screenwriters sign letter calling Gaza war a ‘genocide’
Updated 28 May 2025
Arab News
DUBAI: Members of the literary community including Zadie Smith, Ian McEwan, Russell T Davies, Hanif Kureishi, Frank Cottrell-Boyce and George Monbiot are among 380 writers and organizations who have signed an open letter condemning Israel’s war on Gaza, describing it as genocidal and calling for an immediate ceasefire.
The letter, also signed by William Dalrymple, Jeanette Winterson, Brian Eno, Kate Mosse, Irvine Welsh and Elif Shafak, states: “The use of the words ‘genocide’ or ‘acts of genocide’ to describe what is happening in Gaza is no longer debated by international legal experts or human rights organizations.”
The writers are urging the UN to ensure the free and immediate delivery of food and medical supplies to Gaza, alongside a ceasefire “which guarantees safety and justice for all Palestinians, the release of all Israeli hostages, and the release of the thousands of Palestinian prisoners arbitrarily held in Israeli jails.”
They add that if the Israeli government fails to comply with the demand for a ceasefire, sanctions should be enforced.
The letter, organized by writers Horatio Clare, Kapka Kassabova and Monique Roffey also says that Palestinians “are not the abstract victims of an abstract war. Too often, words have been used to justify the unjustifiable, deny the undeniable, defend the indefensible. Too often, too, the right words – the ones that mattered – have been eradicated, along with those who might have written them.”
The term “genocide” “is not a slogan,” it adds. “It carries legal, political and moral responsibilities.”
Saudi Pavilion at Osaka Expo wins New York Architectural Design Awards
Updated 27 May 2025
Arab News Japan
RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s Pavilion at Expo 2025 Osaka-Kansai was awarded the Gold Prize in the Cultural Architecture in the Interactive and Experiential Spaces category by the New York Architectural Design Awards.
The prize recognizes the pavilion’s design and architecture, which offers visitors an immersive experience and insight into Saudi Arabia’s heritage.
According to the Saudi Press Agency (SPA), the pavilion was spearheaded by the Saudi Architecture and Design Commission and was led by CEO Dr. Sumayah Al-Solaiman and Project Manager Fatima Al-Doukhi. It was also designed by the renowned global firm Foster + Partners.
The design highlights the cultural similarities between the kingdom and Japan, while focusing on sustainability, employing passive cooling strategies enhanced by the strategic placement of structural blocks to facilitate wind movement.
The pavilion features low-carbon materials, energy-efficient lighting and solar energy technologies, SPA reported. It also features Braille signage and pathways for visitors with disabilities, making the building accessible and inclusive.
Saudi Arabia’s pavilion has already attracted over half a million visitors since its launch on April 13.
It has also hosted over 175 events, including cultural performances, business events, media and over 400 VIP delegations.
A vibrant exploration of identity, mind and meaning — Kojo Marfo’s ‘HOME’ comes to Dubai
Updated 26 May 2025
Zeina Zbibo
DUBAI: Ghanaian British artist Kojo Marfo’s first solo exhibition in the UAE — “HOME: Heart of My Existence” — is being held at the JD Malat Gallery in Dubai until May 31.
The exhibition features 13 bold, large-scale works that invite viewers to a deeply personal and philosophical conversation about what it truly means to belong, and where that sense of belonging originates.
Best known for a vibrant style he calls “AfroGenesis,” Marfo blends influences from his Ghanaian heritage including Akan artifacts and carvings with Western techniques like Cubism and Old Master. The results are unique, with vivid, monumental figures that both conceal and reveal complex emotional narratives.
While his early inspirations include Spanish pioneer Picasso, Marfo has moved beyond mimicry to forge his own aesthetic.
“As time went on, I developed my own style and ideas — I call it ‘AfroGenesis.’ It sounds like a movement, but I want to say I am original. I am not trying to start a movement — I am just here to say, I’m authentic.”
A dialogue in color and form
While the dazzling colors and stylized forms initially captivate, it is the underlying message that lingers.
“This is about starting conversations,” Marfo explained. “We think we know everything, but we do not. We live in our minds 24/7 — it tells us what to do, how to feel. The physical space does not mean anything when the mind is in turmoil.”
“HOME” is not about a building or place. For Marfo, home is psychological, internal, shaped by emotion, experience and memory.
“We think home is four walls, a roof, and a lock — but it’s not,” he said. “This exhibition is an invitation for people to look deep into themselves. You need to know yourself, accept and learn from it.”
One of the standouts in the exhibition, “Freedom,” is a visual representation of this inner chaos.
“You can see how chaotic everything is,” said Marfo. “There is a shield — it is what society calls wearing a mask. It protects you from unnecessary aggression. It is our way of life.”
For him, the mask symbolizes humanity’s shifting identities, its emotional defenses and the delicate balance between self-expression and self-preservation.
An artistic evolution
Though Marfo’s work has been shown in global art hubs from Paris to Tokyo, this exhibition marks a significant turning point.
“When the gallery reached out to me, I said, ‘I’m going to introduce something different to this place.’ Most of these pieces have not been shown anywhere. I did it to spark a conversation in Dubai,” he said.
The exhibition is not just a geographical expansion — it is a deepening of his practice. Drawing inspiration from people and the intricacies of human behavior, Marfo paints with storytelling in mind: “Sometimes I paint and then think about the story, but it becomes more difficult. I prefer building on interactions — making it my own and then painting.”
The Saudi artist giving traditional crafts a new voice
Fatimah Al-Nemer honors generational knowledge through collaborations with Saudi craftswomen
Updated 24 May 2025
Hebshi Alshammari
RIYADH: What if traditional crafts were not relics of the past but blueprints for the future? Saudi artist Fatimah Al-Nemer, whose work is on show at Riyadh’s Naila Art Gallery, transforms ancestral materials into contemporary narratives, blending palm fronds, clay, and wool with concept and meaning.
For Al-Nemer, heritage is not something to simply preserve behind glass. It is something to touch, reshape and retell. And traditional crafts are far more than manual skills; they are living archives.
“In the Arabian Peninsula, people adapted to their environment by turning clay, palm fronds, and wool into tools for survival and then into objects of timeless beauty,” she told Arab News.
Saudi Arabia’s traditional crafts, shaped over generations, carry stories that Fatimah Al-Nemer reinterprets through contemporary art techniques. (Supplied)
These crafts, shaped over generations, carry stories that Al-Nemer reinterprets through contemporary art.
Her project, Al-Kar, exemplifies this approach. Named after the traditional climbing tool used by date harvesters, the piece was created in collaboration with Saudi craftswomen.
Al-Nemer transformed humble palm fibers into a three-meter-long rug, elevating simple material into a conceptual installation.
HIGHLIGHTS
• Through her work, Fatimah Al-Nemer dissolves the boundaries between craft and art, heritage and modernity.
• Those curious about the artist’s work can view some of her pieces at solo exhibition ‘Memory of Clay,’ held at Naila Art Gallery until May 30.
“This is not merely an aesthetic celebration,” she said. “It’s a rewriting of our communal identity. Our heritage is rich — not only in materials, but in stories.”
Artist Fatima Al-Nemer with her artworks. (Supplied)
Her work goes beyond decorative craft; she treats traditional practices as conceptual frameworks, weaving narratives through textiles, clay and palm fiber.
Her collaborations with artisans ensure that generational knowledge is embedded in each piece. “The material is never separate from the experience,” she added. “It becomes witness — marked by the presence of women, place and memory.”
Participation in international exhibitions has expanded Al-Nemer’s artistic outlook, allowing her to view local materials like clay and textiles as globally resonant.
This is not merely an aesthetic celebration. It’s a rewriting of our communal identity. Our heritage is rich — not only in materials, but in stories.
Fatimah Al-Nemer, Saudi artist
“The global art scene recontextualizes challenges like the marginalization of craft, and transforms them into dialogues about identity and memory,” she said.
For Al-Nemer, craftswomen are not merely implementers, but collaborators. “They carry manual intelligence honed across generations,” she added, commending institutions like Saudi Arabia’s Heritage Commission and Herfa Association that are now empowering artisans in alignment with the Kingdom’s cultural transformation.
A person contemplates an artwork by Fatima Al-Nemer. (Supplied)
“Craft is no longer confined to the past — it is a living contemporary practice with global relevance,” she said.
Those curious about the artist’s work can view some of her items at solo exhibition “Memory of Clay,” held at Naila Art Gallery until May 30.
The exhibition offers a contemplative journey into themes of memory, belonging and identity transformation, using clay as a visual and cultural symbol.
Artist Fatimah Al-Nemer answers questions from the audience at her exhibition, "Memory of Clay," which runs in Riyadh until May 30. (Supplied)
Featuring 12 works created through mixed media and a combination of traditional and contemporary techniques, Al-Nemer reimagines ancient Saudi crafts through a modernist lens, presenting clay not simply as raw material, but as a timekeeper and silent witness to human evolution.
“Clay is not just a medium,” she said. “It is a mirror of our collective memory, shaped as we are shaped, cracking to reveal hidden layers of nostalgia and wisdom.”
This philosophy materializes in the tactile depth, earthy hues and intricate details that define her works — each piece echoing the raw pulse of life.
To young Saudi women hoping to innovate through craft, Al-Nemer offers this message: “Believe in the value of what you hold. The world doesn’t just want the product — it wants the story behind it.”
With expanding institutional support and evolving creative spaces, the artist sees an opportunity: “Craft can thrive as both art and enterprise as long as authenticity remains at its core.”
Through her work, Al-Nemer dissolves the boundaries between craft and art, heritage and modernity.
Every thread and every texture becomes a testament to identity — crafted by hand, read by the eye and understood by the heart.
Guns N’ Roses wow Riyadh as part of 2025 global tour
Iconic band make major stop on Middle East leg of schedule
Updated 24 May 2025
Arab News
RIYADH: Iconic American rock band Guns N’ Roses performed in Riyadh on Friday as part of their 2025 global tour, marking a major stop on the band’s Middle East schedule.
The group, which was formed in Los Angeles in 1985, took the stage to a packed crowd, kicking off the night with “Welcome to the Jungle.”
The concert was organized by MDLBEAST. (Supplied)
The high-energy set featured classic hits including “November Rain,” “Knockin’ On Heaven’s Door” and “Sweet Child O’ Mine,” with fans singing along throughout.
The concert was organized by MDLBEAST and, ahead of the event, Rayan Al-Rasheed, its director of operations and artist booking, highlighted the significance of hosting such acts in the Kingdom.
The high-energy set featured classic hits including “November Rain,” “Knockin’ On Heaven’s Door” and “Sweet Child O’ Mine,” with fans singing along throughout. (Supplied)
He said: “Saudi Arabia has become a key destination for global music acts. By hosting legendary artists like Guns N’ Roses we aim to elevate the Kingdom’s presence in the global music scene.”
The introduction of rock music to the Saudi musical landscape acknowledged a genre that had long had a strong presence in the country, he said, adding: “The popularity of bands like Metallica and Linkin Park shows that rock has deep roots here.”