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Multidisciplinary art residency captures spirit of Jeddah’s Al-Balad

Artists from diverse backgrounds explored the theme of movement and transformed Bait Shouaib into an active participant in their creative process. (Supplied)
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Artists from diverse backgrounds explored the theme of movement and transformed Bait Shouaib into an active participant in their creative process. (Supplied)
Multidisciplinary art residency captures spirit of Jeddah’s Al-Balad
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Artists from diverse backgrounds explored the theme of movement and transformed Bait Shouaib into an active participant in their creative process. (Supplied)
Multidisciplinary art residency captures spirit of Jeddah’s Al-Balad
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Artists from diverse backgrounds explored the theme of movement and transformed Bait Shouaib into an active participant in their creative process. (Supplied)
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Updated 01 February 2025

Multidisciplinary art residency captures spirit of Jeddah’s Al-Balad

Multidisciplinary art residency captures spirit of Jeddah’s Al-Balad
  • Bait Shouaib Residency brings together diverse creatives to reflect on ‘movement’ in historic district

JEDDAH: Athr Foundation’s Bait Shouaib Arts Residency in Al-Balad district brought together a filmmaker, curator and two artists, fostering interdisciplinary collaboration over an eight-week program.

The Moving Narratives cycle explored the theme of movement through diverse lenses and transformed the historic Bait Shouaib into an active participant in the creative process.

The exhibition, which was open last month as part of this year’s Islamic Arts Biennale, welcomed visitors to witness interpretations of Jeddah’s cultural and historical essence through contemporary art.




Hayfa Algwaiz created a site-specific mobile installation in Bait Shouaib’s stairwell, or minwar. (Supplied)

Residency director and senior program manager at Athr Foundation, Ibrahim Romman, highlighted the program’s impact and told Arab News: “Each resident’s exploration of ‘movement’ became an invitation to reflect on how stories, spaces and identities shift and intersect.

“Together, their work offered a richly layered response to the theme, presenting interdisciplinary perspectives that bridged the historical with the contemporary.”

Sudanese artist Rund Alarabi has created a poetic video installation bridging the cultural and architectural legacies of the port cities of Jeddah and Suakin, Sudan.




Vietnamese curator Nhat Q. Vo centered his project around Al-Shafi’i Mosque. (Supplied)

Her project delves into the undocumented and intangible aspects of collective memory. She told Arab News: “Living between Frankfurt, Khartoum and Jeddah has fed my practice with various materials and unraveled new ways of misunderstanding. This has led me to question what I consider to be given and rethink my understanding of global and local consensus.”

Featuring sensory elements such as soundscapes composed of everyday cooking utensils, her installation forges an intimate connection to cultural memory. “Sound and moving images act as vessels that challenge our understanding of reality. They highlight overlooked aspects of our existence by infiltrating beyond our preconceived assumptions,” she said.

Filmmaker Nada Al-Mojadedi drew inspiration from Hejazi folklore to craft an immersive narrative that seamlessly blends performance, textiles and moving images. Her dual-room installation transformed her studio into a theatrical set, inviting visitors to journey through time.




Sudanese artist Rund Alarabi’s video installation bridged the architectural legacies of the port cities of Jeddah and Suakin, Sudan. (Supplied)

Al-Mojadedi explained: “I wanted to blur the lines between performer and observer, offering an intimate reflection on identity and memory.”

Speaking about her approach to the theme, she added: “For me, movement transcends the physical; it embodies the unseen — a constant, evolving force of imagination, a ‘quantum dance’ through time and space. This concept guided my exploration of Hejazi folklore, where I intertwined heritage with newly crafted urban legends.

“Immersing myself in Al-Balad’s vibrant life and stories, and inspired by my connection to Bait Shouaib and a visiting butterfly, I created Haleema, a Hejazi urban legend inspired by the untold stories of women who once lived in these spaces.”

Reflecting on her creative process, Al-Mojadedi said: “My work layers the personal with the performative, reimagining space as both a site of storytelling and an active participant in the narrative. Being part of this residency was an enriching experience that allowed us to delve into the dynamic cultural tapestry of Al-Balad and contribute our individual narratives to its enduring story.”

Similarly, another artist, Nhat Q. Vo, a Vietnamese curator and cultural worker, explored the transient histories of Jeddah’s migrant worker communities, centering his project around Al-Shafi’i Mosque, a hub of cultural exchange.

“When I arrived in Al-Balad, I was drawn to its physical environment and the untold stories of the laborers who sustain Historic Jeddah. At first, the language barrier made it difficult to connect, but my discovery of Al-Shafi’i Mosque changed everything.

“The sight of people gathering for iftar, united by faith despite their differences, inspired me to represent their stories through their shared rituals rather than words.”

Speaking about how architecture informed his creative approach, he said: “Architecture became a vessel for these narratives, a place where diverse communities converge. Using over 70 meters of fabric to replace the plastic sufra at the mosque, I allowed the material to absorb the traces of shared meals and human connection.

“The fabric, marked by food crumbs, oil stains and creases, became a tangible record of collective memory. For me, the real inspiration comes from the people whose lives and routines shape the rich tapestry of these spaces.”

Riyadh-based artist and architect, Hayfa Algwaiz, has created a site-specific mobile installation in Bait Shouaib’s stairwell, or minwar, exploring the interplay between movement, space and architectural elements.

Activating the stairwell as a dynamic participant in her narrative, she said: “The subtle movement of the mobile mirrored the ephemeral qualities of light, air and transition experienced in Al-Balad. By focusing on a single element, I was able to honor the historic significance of the space while introducing contemporary artistic interpretations.”

Elaborating on her approach, she said: “As an artist and architect, I strive to bridge the past and the present by focusing on elements that connect them, such as the framed openings in historic structures like Bait Shouaib. These openings, adorned with intricate ornamentation, are constants that I deconstruct and reconstruct to reflect our contemporary times.

“In ֱ’s rapidly changing urban landscape, I aim to spark a dialogue around what should be preserved and what can evolve. By reinterpreting traditional materials, spatial layouts and ornamentation into modern expressions, I hope to honor our cultural identity while embracing the future.”

Animated by natural airflow, her installation reflects the residency’s ethos of bridging tradition with innovation.

“Architecture has the potential to transform into a living, breathing entity, and I sought to capture that essence,” she said.


ֱ joins global celebration of World Cities Day

ֱ joins global celebration of World Cities Day
Updated 31 October 2025

ֱ joins global celebration of World Cities Day

ֱ joins global celebration of World Cities Day
  • This work supports Vision 2030’s goals for advancing urbanization worldwide and leveraging international cooperation

RIYADH: ֱ joined the global community celebrating World Cities Day, observed annually on Oct. 31, in recognition of the progress and development seen across the Kingdom’s cities.

The nation’s achievements are driven by the efforts of various government sectors, which are implementing ambitious development projects to ensure a high standard of living and well-being for residents and visitors, the Saudi Press Agency reported on Friday.

This work supports Vision 2030’s goals for advancing urbanization worldwide and leveraging international cooperation to tackle urban challenges and capitalize on opportunities.

This annual observance provides a global framework to reinforce the international community’s commitment to the New Urban Agenda, foster cooperation between nations on the challenges and opportunities of urbanization, and raise awareness about delivering urban services to improve the quality of life and the urban environment, the SPA reported.

World Cities Day was first celebrated in 2014. As with World Habitat Day, a global observance is held in a different city each year and the day focuses on a specific theme. The theme for 2025 is: People-Centred Smart Cities.

According to the UN, this year’s theme reflects the growing recognition that the transformative power of digital technologies is reshaping urban life globally, offering opportunities to enhance how cities and human settlements are designed, planned, managed and governed.

The annual day aims to raise international awareness of urbanization trends, challenges and visions for sustainable urban development, promote international cooperation and contribute to global efforts to build equitable, prosperous, sustainable and inclusive cities that provide their communities with better living environments and quality of life, the SPA reported.


Madinah tops region, 73 percent of visitors choose as first destination

Madinah tops region, 73 percent of visitors choose as first destination
Updated 31 October 2025

Madinah tops region, 73 percent of visitors choose as first destination

Madinah tops region, 73 percent of visitors choose as first destination
  • The chamber said in its latest report that the holy city was the primary destination for visitors to the region

RIYADH: The holy city has topped cities across the region in visitors’ choice, according to the Madinah Chamber of Commerce.

The chamber said in its latest report that the holy city was the primary destination for visitors to the region.

Tourism performance indicators showed that 73.7 percent of visitors to the region choose Madinah as their destination, drawn by its combination of sacred significance and profound historical connection to Prophet Muhammad.

The report indicated that Madinah ranked among the top 100 global destinations and secured the seventh position worldwide in the tourism performance index, reflecting its status as a destination that combines spiritual significance with cultural and economic attractions.

The report also noted that 47.2 percent of incoming tourists visited AlUla governorate, thanks to its cultural events, historical experiences and UNESCO World Heritage sites, while 14.1 percent of domestic tourists chose Yanbu governorate for its beautiful beaches and marine and recreational services, making it a preferred family destination.

The chamber said that these indicators reflected the rapid growth in the tourism sector in the Madinah region, in light of the integrated efforts undertaken by the national tourism system to support destinations and enhance the Kingdom’s position on the global visitors’ map, in line with the objectives of Saudi Vision 2030.

The report also commended the efforts of the Madinah Region Development Authority in implementing qualitative development and tourism projects.

Ahmad Al-Otaibi, a Taif resident working in Riyadh, told Arab News: “Madinah has always been a city close to our heart. No city can compare to the peaceful atmosphere of Madinah, the people keep the city alive 24 hours and 365 days, and yet the atmosphere still calms you.”

He praised the Madinah Development Authority for their work and improving the infrastructure and services related to the hospitality and religious tourism sectors, as mostly religious tourists visit the holy city, and contributing to raising the quality of life and enhancing the tourism experience for both visitors as well as residents.

Madinah also topped cities across ֱ in occupancy rates for tourist hospitality facilities during the first half of 2025, reaching 74.7 percent, according to a report published by the Ministry of Tourism earlier this month.

The city’s licensed hospitality sector saw substantial growth, with total licensed facilities reaching 538, including 69 new licenses, and total hotel rooms of 64,569, including 6,628 newly added rooms.

The growth underscores Madinah’s position as a leading destination for religious tourism and reflects the impact of large-scale development projects that are enhancing accommodation capacity and service quality, aligning with the goals of Saudi Vision 2030.


Exhibition at Ithra explores the notion of home from the perspective of 28 Saudi artists

Exhibition at Ithra explores the notion of home from the perspective of 28 Saudi artists
Updated 31 October 2025

Exhibition at Ithra explores the notion of home from the perspective of 28 Saudi artists

Exhibition at Ithra explores the notion of home from the perspective of 28 Saudi artists

DHAHRAN: The King Abdulaziz Center for World Culture, commonly known as Ithra, this week presents “Echoes of the Familiar,” a new exhibition exploring the meaning of home. The exhibition runs from Oct. 31 to Sept. 1, 2026.

Although the official opening coincides with Halloween, it is not a haunted house — rather, it asks visitors to ponder what constitutes a Saudi home.

Gaida Al-Mogren, curator of the exhibition and artistic director of the Noor Riyadh Festival, spoke to Arab News about the project. An architect and a leading voice in Saudi contemporary art, she brings more than two decades of experience merging architecture, culture and art.

“We were thinking of the house and how the walls hold memory. And actually, in certain places, you can hear the whispers of these walls,” she said. “They can tell us the stories of the people that lived in it, and all the things that happened within these walls. And then, of course, we started thinking about walking on the tiles and the noises these places make. And so, from that, the echo started coming up.”

The exhibition opens with a vibrant red door, a stylistic choice that also serves as a transitional door, reflecting the era when Saudi homes moved from wooden doors in mud houses to aluminum doors with colored glass in concrete homes. Al-Mogren said the door was chosen to resonate across regions, connecting Najdi, Hasawi, and other traditional patterns throughout ֱ.

Gaida Al-Mogren, curator of the exhibition and artistic director of the Noor Riyadh Festival. (Supplied)

“Before we enter the exhibition, we have the timeline that tells you the story of Saudi, in the past century and all the changes, the big changes that we went through.”

Al-Mogren welcomed visitors by saying, “our house is your house.”

The gallery is divided into six sections: The Building, The Living Room, The Kitchen, The Hallway of Memories, The Bedroom, and The People of the Home.

Each space reimagines familiar domestic environments as thresholds between the personal and the collective, where memory and identity continuously intertwine. Some will trigger a lived memory, others will evoke nostalgic vibes.

The exhibition features 28 Saudi artists: Ahmed Mater, Abdullah Al-Jahdhami, Abdullah Al-Othman, Abeer Sultan, Alaa Tarabzouni, Arwa Al-Neami, Palestinian-Saudi artist Ayman Yossri Daydban, and Daniah Al-Saleh, winner of the 2019 Ithra Art Prize. Others featured are Filwa Nazer from Jeddah, Hassan Jassim Al-Jassim from Al-Ahsa, Rashed Al-Shashai — founder of the Tasami Center for Visual Arts — and Obaid Al-Safi.

There are additional works by Maram Al-Suliman, Madhawi and Hayfa Al-Gwaiz, Noor Al-Saif, Nawaf Al-Dohan, and Meshari Abdulaziz Al-Dosari, with Dana Al-Turki, Norah Saud, Rashed Al-Subaie, Kawthar Al-Atiyah, Roaa Mofreh, Saad Al-Howede, Saddek Wasil, Shaima Saleh, Skna Hassan and Turki Al-Qahtani completing the line-up.

The artists represent diverse backgrounds, from boomers to Gen-Z, and come from various regions, including Sharqiya, Jeddah, and Riyadh, with work in various styles and mediums, reflecting the diversity of the Kingdom.

The exhibition explores domestic life as lived, remembered, and imagined, turning private spaces into layered stories.

Satellite dishes, once prominent fixtures on rooftops, are part of the narrative, evoking the past while highlighting how we interact with technology in our homes. Cassette tapes and VHS tapes recall the tactile memory of media.

Objects in the “junk drawer” illustrate everyday domesticity.

“I call it ‘the drawer of memories,’ because you have the stubs and receipts — we hold on to these things because it makes us feel safe,” Al-Mogren said.

The exhibition includes echoes of smells, sounds and textures: the lingering scent of cardamom, lost laughter, wiped fingerprints on doorknobs, and spaces that once held faces but now remain absent. As well as the philosophical spaces in between rooms — the hallways.

It is a live archive from the 1970s, ’80s, and ’90s, and a meditation on belonging.

Al-Mogren described the process of working with a multigenerational group of artists.

“My practice is the intersection between art, architecture, and culture. And so this project is exactly in that intersection,” she said. “And a lot of these artists they have practices that I was exposed to that have similar ideas. And so, I met with them, and we discussed how can we bring their practices and even create things that are out of the norm, but still stay true to them.”

Al-Mogren reflected on her personal journey and putting on the exhibition at Ithra — which is a true center of world culture, as its name alludes.

“I grew up in Sharqiya. So my home was here — so I’m coming back home. Full circle. My family had their older house, and then I got married, and I moved to the States, and I lived abroad. So for 16 years, I felt like I lacked that whole ‘feeling of home’ which I yearned for. And I had this longing to have an actual home instead of being in Europe, or in the States.

“When I moved back (to Saudi), my family moved to a new home. So I felt like I lost those whispers in the walls. I lost my memories, in a way, in that transition. And with me moving from one city to the other, I felt like I didn’t have one place to build that memory, as well. And even for my kids. So now, I’m working really hard to create these rituals and these things for my children to have that feeling of home.”

Reflection on her children’s concept of home, she said: “It’s funny, because they say ‘home’ is where you are, mommy. So it’s not about the space. It’s more about the people.”


‘Geometry of Beauty’ exhibition bridges art, science, spirituality

‘Geometry of Beauty’ exhibition bridges art, science, spirituality
Updated 31 October 2025

‘Geometry of Beauty’ exhibition bridges art, science, spirituality

‘Geometry of Beauty’ exhibition bridges art, science, spirituality
  • 28 artists use the lens of Islamic geometry and Arabic calligraphy
  • Explores ‘universal’ forms of meaning, says gallerist Qaswra Hafez

JEDDAH: A new exhibition titled “Geometry of Beauty: A Language to Read or an Equation to Solve?” has opened at MNWR Space in Jeddah, bringing together 28 artists whose works explore art, science and spirituality through Islamic geometry and Arabic calligraphy.

Presented by MNWR in collaboration with Hafez Gallery and Makhtut Studio and curated by Abdelrahman Elshahed, the exhibition runs until Nov. 7.

Qaswra Hafez, founder of Hafez Gallery, outlined the aim of the exhibition.

“‘Geometry of Beauty’ is born from our dedication for uniting traditional and contemporary approaches, inviting artists to explore whether beauty is a language we speak or an equation we uncover; from the orbit of an atom to the sacred circle of the pilgrim’s tawaf (circumambulation around the Kaaba).”

Hafez said the collaboration with MNWR Space and Makhtut Studio “brings this exploration full circle, revealing how Islamic geometry and Arabic calligraphy address universal questions of form and meaning that can speak directly to today’s audience.”

Curator Abdelrahman Elshahed explained that the exhibition grew from a single question linking devotion, science, and visual logic. (Supplied)

Elshahed said: “The show began with a simple question: is beauty a language we learn or an equation we measure? From the atom’s orbit to the pilgrim’s tawaf, circular motion, proportion, and repetition tie science to devotion and to the visual logic of Islamic art.

To select the participating artists, he sought those who could “activate that triangle — heritage, inquiry, and experiment,” considering mastery of calligraphy or geometry, conceptual clarity, technical skill, and a balance between generations, genders, and artistic disciplines.

He said: “We built coherence through shared ‘keys,’ the circle, the grid, and the golden ratio, sequencing works in constellations, calligraphy beside abstraction, manuscript ornament beside sound and light, so motifs echo across media.”

He added that his background as an artist and calligrapher trained him “to see structure inside emotion, line as breath, spacing as silence, proportion as meaning.

“That sensibility guided the curation, privileging works where craft and concept are inseparable, while ensuring the process, hand-dyed papers, ruled geometries, algorithmic patterning, and embodied gestures, is legible so viewers can ‘read’ how beauty is built.

“Above all, I hope visitors leave sensing continuity between their heartbeat and a compass-drawn rosette, between cosmic order and everyday care, and see faith, reason, and creativity not as separate rooms but as one house with many doors.”

Among the featured artists is Ehab Mamdouh, who spoke about his series “Reflection of the Soul.”

Among the featured artists is Ehab Mamdouh, whose series “Reflection of the Soul” explores the principle of reflection as both a spiritual and aesthetic act. (Supplied)

“‘Reflection of the Soul’ is a meditation on the principle of reflection: just as clear water reflects everything around it and a mirror reflects whatever stands before it — what happens when words themselves are reflected?”

His paintings, inspired by the verse “In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful” and the divine name “Al-Raheem,” extend from what he calls his “own artistic school grounded in the Law of Uniqueness and Repetition.”

“Amid the demands of my daily work as the director of a media company and filmmaker, I find in art a profoundly personal space to express and reveal the reflections of my soul, away from market requirements,” he said.

Mamdouh added about the exhibition: “From the moment one enters the gallery, a palpable sense of serenity and spirituality emerges, alongside a refined artistic diversity that highlights the interplay and cohesion among the works.”

He praised Elshahed’s curation that creates “a vibrant dialogue between the Islamic visual heritage and contemporary modes of scientific thinking.

“Geometry, calligraphy, and ornamental heritage are read through the lenses of mathematics, algorithms, and data, generating bridges of knowledge that connect intuitive sensibility with scientific method.”

For artist Basmah Al-Saqabi, whose work focuses on the Arabic word “Allah,” the exhibition embodies the meeting of sacred light and structured form.

“At the center of this piece lies the Arabic word ‘Allah,’ radiant as the essence of divine light that rises above all else. Surrounding it are interwoven colors and geometric lines — symbols of the vast universe with all its diversity and reflections,” she said.

Inspired by her late father, pioneering calligrapher Mohammed Al-Saqabi, her piece merges deep spirituality with geometric abstraction.

“Being part of ‘Geometry of Beauty’ feels like entering a galaxy of luminous minds, where each artist forms an orbit of thought and vision. The exhibition does not merely gather artworks; it creates a new map of beauty that connects art, science, and the human spirit,” she said.

For Al-Saqabi, geometry offers a path to transcendence. “I treat precision as a means of honoring chaos. Geometry, to me, is not a limitation but a gateway to contemplation, giving creativity a framework through which it can breathe,” she explained.

Artist Abdulrahman Al-Kabran has contributed a work titled “Between Earth and Sky,” a visual meditation on the spiritual journey of humankind.

Artist Abdulrahman Al-Kabran contributes a work titled “Between Earth and Sky,” a visual meditation on the spiritual journey of humankind. (Supplied)

“I used the pilgrim’s ihram (two pieces of unstitched cloth) as a symbolic surface representing purity and detachment, transforming it into a visual tapestry of dots and buttons that signify the collective movement and rhythm of the crowds circling the Kaaba.

“The diverse colors merge harmoniously, reflecting the unity of world cultures,” he said. “I balance precision and creativity by transforming geometry into a spiritual language.

“It symbolizes cosmic order, yet I introduce handmade materials that break its rigidity and restore the human touch, allowing the work to become a dialogue between mind and spirit,” he said.

He said such exhibitions “revive the essence of Islamic art. When viewers see how lines and forms evolve into a harmonious system, they realize that science and art speak the same language — the language of creation and divine order.”

Artist Maha Khogeer, whose work “Siyah va Sefid” (Black and White) reinterprets calligraphy as pure form, and explained that her approach seeks to liberate letters from linguistic function.

Artist Abdulrahman Al-Kabran contributes a work titled “Between Earth and Sky,” a visual meditation on the spiritual journey of humankind. (Supplied)
Artist Abdulrahman Al-Kabran contributes a work titled “Between Earth and Sky,” a visual meditation on the spiritual journey of humankind. (Supplied)
Artist Abdulrahman Al-Kabran contributes a work titled “Between Earth and Sky,” a visual meditation on the spiritual journey of humankind. (Supplied)
Artist Abdulrahman Al-Kabran contributes a work titled “Between Earth and Sky,” a visual meditation on the spiritual journey of humankind. (Supplied)
Artist Abdulrahman Al-Kabran contributes a work titled “Between Earth and Sky,” a visual meditation on the spiritual journey of humankind. (Supplied)
Artist Abdulrahman Al-Kabran contributes a work titled “Between Earth and Sky,” a visual meditation on the spiritual journey of humankind. (Supplied)
Among the featured artists is Ehab Mamdouh, whose series “Reflection of the Soul” explores the principle of reflection as both a spiritual and aesthetic act. (Supplied)
Among the featured artists is Ehab Mamdouh, whose series “Reflection of the Soul” explores the principle of reflection as both a spiritual and aesthetic act. (Supplied)
Among the featured artists is Ehab Mamdouh, whose series “Reflection of the Soul” explores the principle of reflection as both a spiritual and aesthetic act. (Supplied)
Among the featured artists is Ehab Mamdouh, whose series “Reflection of the Soul” explores the principle of reflection as both a spiritual and aesthetic act. (Supplied)
Among the featured artists is Ehab Mamdouh, whose series “Reflection of the Soul” explores the principle of reflection as both a spiritual and aesthetic act. (Supplied)
Among the featured artists is Ehab Mamdouh, whose series “Reflection of the Soul” explores the principle of reflection as both a spiritual and aesthetic act. (Supplied)
Among the featured artists is Ehab Mamdouh, whose series “Reflection of the Soul” explores the principle of reflection as both a spiritual and aesthetic act. (Supplied)
Among the featured artists is Ehab Mamdouh, whose series “Reflection of the Soul” explores the principle of reflection as both a spiritual and aesthetic act. (Supplied)
Among the featured artists is Ehab Mamdouh, whose series “Reflection of the Soul” explores the principle of reflection as both a spiritual and aesthetic act. (Supplied)
Among the featured artists is Ehab Mamdouh, whose series “Reflection of the Soul” explores the principle of reflection as both a spiritual and aesthetic act. (Supplied)

“My piece is a balanced visual composition between blackness and whiteness. The piece re-contextualizes calligraphy as an independent element, transcending its traditional linguistic function to become a visual expression rich in contrasts,” she said.

Khogeer believes that art inevitably mirrors life. “Every artist is a product of the culture, history, and civilization in which they were born and raised. It’s clear that their work is a reflection of the ideas, feelings, and experiences shaped within the context of their time and place.”

She added: “Exhibitions like ‘Geometry of Beauty’ are essential in the contemporary art scene.

“The displayed works open up a space for dialogue, convergence, and interaction between ideas and cultures, highlighting the richness of the arts and showcasing the inherent beauty within them,” she said.


Tokyo, Jeddah governors meet to discuss ties

Tokyo, Jeddah governors meet to discuss ties
Updated 31 October 2025

Tokyo, Jeddah governors meet to discuss ties

Tokyo, Jeddah governors meet to discuss ties
  • The meeting at the Jeddah governorate’s headquarters was attended by Japanese Consul General

JEDDAH: Tokyo Gov. Yuriko Koike met with her Jeddah counterpart Prince Saud bin Abdullah bin Jalawi on Wednesday during her regional tour aimed at strengthening cooperation between Japan and the Arab region.

The meeting at the Jeddah governorate’s headquarters was attended by Japanese Consul General in Jeddah Daisuke Yamamoto and members of Koike’s delegation.

Koike had visited Riyadh this week for the Future Investment Initiative 2025, where she outlined Tokyo’s ambitions to become a global financial and creative hub.

At the conference, she participated in a panel alongside “Captain Tsubasa” creator Yoichi Takahashi, and highlighted how Japan’s manga and anime industries can fuel creative investment and tourism.

Koike began her Gulf tour in the UAE, where she attended the “Discover the Culture of Tokyo” event in Abu Dhabi.

Koike will visit Kuwait and Egypt before heading back to Japan.