Cristiano Ronaldo, Georgina Rodriguez star in Saudi cruise campaign
Cristiano Ronaldo, Georgina Rodriguez star in Saudi cruise campaign/node/2596678/lifestyle
Cristiano Ronaldo, Georgina Rodriguez star in Saudi cruise campaign
Both Ronaldo and Rodriguez shared the campaign on their social media profiles. (Instagram)
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Updated 11 April 2025
Arab News
Cristiano Ronaldo, Georgina Rodriguez star in Saudi cruise campaign
Updated 11 April 2025
Arab News
DUBAI: Portuguese footballer Cristiano Ronaldo and Argentine model Georgina Rodriguez appeared together in a new campaign for º£½ÇÖ±²¥â€™s luxury cruise line, Aroya Cruises.Ìı
In the video, the pair exchange a lighthearted moment in Arabic, with Rodriguez saying “yalla†after selecting the cruise on her phone and Ronaldo replying with a cheerful “yalla,†meaning “let’s go.â€Ìı
The campaign then transitions into scenes of the couple exploring the cruise experience, showcasing panoramic sea views, luxurious interiors, and their private accommodation on board.
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Both Ronaldo and Rodriguez shared the campaign on their social media profiles, captioning the post: “Home isn’t just a place—it’s a feeling.â€Ìı
The Aroya cruise ship features a range of amenities, including a spa, multiple restaurants, a theater, water park, retail area, kids’ zone and several swimming pools.
Currently operating primarily from Jeddah, Aroya Cruises offers voyages across the Red Sea, with stops at destinations such as Sharm El-Sheikh in Egypt, Aqaba in Jordan and Jabal Al-Sabaya Island.
Starting June 2025, the cruise line will expand its operations to the Eastern Mediterranean, with new itineraries departing from Istanbul and visiting ports in Greece and Turkiye, including Mykonos, Rhodes and Antalya.
From street to gallery: Fathima Mohiuddin reimagines space in Ishara’s ‘No Trespassing’
Updated 16 August 2025
Hams Saleh
DUBAI: Dubai-born artist Fathima Mohiuddin, known as Fatspatrol, is one of six featured artists in “No Trespassing,†a summer exhibition at Dubai’s Ishara Art Foundation.
The show, which runs until Aug. 30, explores boundaries — physical, cultural, and institutional — through the lens of street art aesthetics recontextualized within the gallery’s white cube space.
“I’m not typically a gallery exhibiting artist,†Mohiuddin told Arab News. “I’ve spent a good part of my career as an artist and curator in street art because the urban art space has just felt like a more comfortable place for me.â€
Fatspatrol, ‘The World Out There,’ 2025. (Supplied)
Mohiuddin, who recently returned to the UAE after seven years abroad, added: “I’m really glad to have landed right here in this show.â€
Her work, titled “The World Out There,†explores the tension between personal identity and the outside world.
“Boundaries and restrictions have been a big part of not just my work but of things I’ve had to navigate in my life,†she said. “My work is very much about mark-making … to say, ‘I was here, I was unique in a world that doesn’t want me to be, and I mattered.’â€
Mohiuddin initially planned to show small-scale works on reclaimed materials such as road signs and license plates, but found her pieces “looked really small and almost as if they were intimidated†by the space.
With curator Priyanka Mehra’s encouragement, she adopted a new approach. “I told Priyanka I wanted to bring in some texture and I’m going to paint with brooms.â€
The result is a large-scale, layered installation that channels the grit and energy of the streets.
“To be able to loosen up and work freely without restriction and prerequisite was amazing. And brooms. I used brooms in my mark-making for the first time,†Mohiuddin said.
Through her personal, intuitive process, she hopes to provoke “a raw humanness†in viewers.
“Perhaps let’s say I hope it provokes a human response,†she added.
Nadeen Ayoub to represent Palestine at Miss Universe for the first time
Updated 15 August 2025
Arab News
DUBAI: Nadeen Ayoub announced this week that she will represent Palestine for the first time at the 74th Miss Universe pageant, set to take place this November in Pak Kret, Thailand.
She took to Instagram to write: “Today, I step onto the Miss Universe stage not just with a title — but with a truth. As Palestine endures heartbreak — especially in Gaza — I carry the voice of a people who refuse to be silenced.
“I represent every Palestinian woman and child whose strength the world needs to see. We are more than our suffering — we are resilience, hope and the heartbeat of a homeland that lives on through us,†she added.
Ayoub, a fitness coach and nutrition consultant now based in Dubai, previously held the title of Miss Earth Water at the Miss Earth pageant in Manila in 2022.
She was also the first woman to represent Palestine at that event, which is considered one of the four major international beauty pageants, alongside Miss World, Miss Universe and Miss International.
She was crowned Miss Palestine in 2022.
Ayoub is the founder of Olive Green Academy, a content creation school that integrates sustainability with artificial intelligence.
Bella Hadid honors her roots in dress by Palestinian brand Reemami
Updated 15 August 2025
Arab News
DUBAI: Model Bella Hadid championed a Palestinian-owned brand this week, wearing a white dress she described as “a piece of art.â€
The dress is by Reemami, a label founded by Dubai-based designer Reema Al-Banna. It features delicate, hand-drawn-style illustrations scattered across the fabric, along with a cut-out detail at the chest, a structured collar and a gold belt that cinches the waist.
Hadid, of Dutch-Palestinian heritage, completed the look with stacked gold bangles on both wrists.
In the Instagram carousel where she showcased the outfit, she also held Eternal Roots, a fragrance she recently launched under her namesake brand Orebella.
“Wearing a piece of art by a brilliant, beautiful, hard working, talented young Palestinian artist and designer today,†she wrote to her 61.1 million followers. “Miss @reemamiofficial a reminder that Eternal Roots isn’t just a name, it’s a way of living … thank you to the amazing, multifaceted Palestinian princess @reemamiofficial.â€
Hadid then went on to talk about her latest launch, which has notes of lychee, papyrus and vetiver.
“Eternal Roots is about more than trees in the earth ... while it is blooming into our strength ... keeping our softness when the world tries to turn us hard ... it’s just as significant to hold onto your lineage when the world makes it hard,†she wrote. “Care for others. It’s about protecting the threads that tie us to our families, our heritage, our truth. It’s standing by the causes that matter, even when they’re not easy to speak about. It’s choosing to nurture what you believe in, the way you nurture what you love.
“Because roots are not passives ... they hold us steady through storms, and they remind us of who we are when the ground feels unsteady,†she added. “My roots are my compass. They are my strength and genuinely lead me through some of the toughest times … They are my family; blood tied and not, my ancestors, Mother Nature, God and Love. And they will always, always run deep.â€
The model and entrepreneur also paid tribute to Chilean-Palestinian singer Elyanna by featuring her song “Olive Branch†in the post. “Music by @elyanna — bless you habibti, I am so proud of you and all that you do,†she wrote.
Princess Rajwa stuns in white at ceremony to honor top high school graduates in JordanÌı
Updated 15 August 2025
Arab News
DUBAI: Princess Rajwa of Jordan made a chic fashion statement this week in an all-white ensemble when she joined her husband, Crown Prince Al-Hussein bin Abdullah, at Al-Basman Palace to welcome and congratulate the country’s top achievers in the General Secondary Education Certificate Examination.
The princess’s look, from Dubai-based label Chats by C.Dam, featured a high-neck, long-sleeved top paired with wide-leg bottoms tailored to resemble a skirt from the front. The outfit was cinched at the waist with subtle metallic accents.
Princess Rajwa accessorized with the Maison Alaia Mina 20 bag in black Vienne Wave calfskin and completed the look with Alexander McQueen’s punk buckle black leather mules.
The General Secondary Education Certificate Examination, commonly known as Tawjihi, is the final examination for high school pupils in Jordan. It is a significant academic milestone that determines students’ eligibility for university admission.
High-scoring students are often recognized at national level for their academic excellence.
“Today, a group of promising young men and women reap the rewards of their hard work,†the crown prince wrote on Instagram, sharing a picture from the event. “Congratulations to you and your families on your outstanding achievement in the General Secondary Education Certificate Examination. I wish you continued success in your academic and professional journeys.â€
Joana Hadjithomas, Khalil Joreige on their latest exhibition ‘Remembering the Light’Ìı
Updated 15 August 2025
Adam Grundey
DUBAI: “We’ve been working a lot on questioning the writing of history in Lebanon — and elsewhere; the construction of imaginaries and stories kept secret,†says Lebanese artist and filmmaker Joana Hadjithomas.
In “Remembering the Light,†their solo exhibition which runs at Beirut’s Sursock Museum until September 4, Hadjithomas and her husband and creative partner Khalil Joreige present a collection of works that gather their wide-ranging influences and interests. Not just hidden histories — such as those revealed in the video installation “Remember the Light,†from which the show takes its title and in which divers head into the depths of the sea of Lebanon’s coast, drifting down past tanks, ships, and artifacts from ancient civilizations — but the power and necessity of art in troubled times, the cyclical nature of time, regeneration from chaos, and much more. It is also, as the title suggests, a show filled with hope, even though the bulk of the works on display were created at a time when hope was in short supply in Lebanon.
Joana Hadjithomas and Khalil Joreige. (Supplied)
“But My Head Is Still Singing,†the sixth work in their series “I Stared At Beauty So Much†— one of three main bodies of work around which the exhibition is based — is a prime example. It’s an installation in which looped videos are projected onto two screens made from layers of broken and salvaged glass. Glass from the duo’s studio and apartment, both of which were devastated by the explosion in the Port of Beirut in 2020.
“We wanted to transform the glass into something,†says Hadjithomas. “After the blast, it was very difficult to produce art… There was this question. ‘What for? How can art help with all this?’ And we thought about the figure of Orpheus (from Greek mythology), saddened by the loss of (his lover) Eurydice. He was dismembered by the maenads, but his head still kept singing. So, we brought together some friends, and we recited some verses from several poets (poetry and poets, she says later, can “counter chaosâ€) that refer to Orpheus. Even though our voices were exhausted, we were still singing, in a way. So you hear the voices and you can see some of the words on the screen.â€
Collaboration such as this is key to the duo’s work (“We like to see through the eyes of others,†Hadjithomas says). Take the divers in “Remember the Light,†for example. That video, Joreige explains, is “about the feeling we have sometimes that our world is shrinking — losing some variation of color and the possibility of light, and we have to find it. The more you go down in water, the more the water will filter the light and you’ll lose the colors. But if you put a light here, all the color will reappear, and when you remove the light, the plankton remember the light and refract its luminescence.†It is, Hadjithomas adds, “a (reminder) to remember the light, even in times of despair.â€
Message with(out) a code, 2022 Close-up, tapestries, different kind of yarn. (Supplied)
Collaboration is also central to their ongoing “Uncomformities†project, another of the show’s major bodies of work, and one which won the duo France’s most significant contemporary art prize in 2017. The works in the project — including “Palimpsests,†“Time Capsules,†“Message With(out) A Code,†and “Blow Up†— are based around their fascination with what lies hidden beneath our feet, particularly in three cities: Athens, Paris, and Beirut. The project was inspired by core samples taken by geologists and archeologists — which show the layers of stratification in the earth and can be “read†by experts.
“The fact that these things were taking us into really deep time was very interesting,†says Hadjithomas. “Archeologists talk about the way things are always changing and evolving. And at the moment like the one we are living, understanding that after disasters there’s always a regeneration is very important.â€
“Most of the time, when you imagine sedimentation (in the earth), you think of a stratification that is linear,†Joreige says. “But what we discovered with archeology is that when you dig, what is old moves up, and what is new moves down … you are recycling, redoing, regenerating. You are using the traces of civilizations to build new ones.â€
That’s apparent in “Time Capsules,†an installation that includes three large tubes of core samples taken from the area around the Sursock Museum, and which include traces of the tsunami that occurred following the Beirut Earthquake of 551 CE, killing tens of thousands.
“The undergrounds of cities help us understand the way histories are always cycles of construction and destruction and regeneration,†says Hadjithomas. “And this movement of deep time and history can help us when we are in situations (like today).â€
“Unconformities†also includes “Message With(out) A Code,†a collection of tapestries based on large photographs the pair had collected of archeological traces from digs, woven in such a way that they appear three-dimensional, even though they are not.
“We were fascinated by these samples,†says Hadjithomas. “We started taking pictures of them, but without really knowing what they were.â€
“We weren’t really able to understand what we were seeing. Like, you think you’re looking at stone, but actually you’re looking at teeth. You always need the eyes of others,†Joreige says, once again highlighting the benefits of their collaborative process, in this case working with archeologists.
While it’s clear that the duo’s work would not be what it is without the input of others, perhaps the most significant factor in all of it is their own natural curiosity. When they come across an object that most of us would discard, their instinct is to ask instead: “Why is this here and what can we learn from it?†They might keep that object for years before they figure out how to turn it into art, but inevitably they do. And with “Remembering the Light,†they hope once again to spark that same curiosity in others.
“We are trying to reveal a certain complexity,†says Joreige. “Sometimes you can’t explain because there’s nothing to explain. There’s no easy answer. But (for visitors), we hope that an encounter will occur. We want to share this moment of experiencing something uncommon.â€
“We take people with us on a journey to experience and to share knowledge, share emotions and research. For me, it’s not about understanding everything, but to have, like, an impression,†Hadjithomas adds. “You just have to feel something, then understand more if you want. There’s a lot of layers. And you can dig as much as you want.â€