Riyadh: The year 2025 has been designated the “Year of Handicrafts” in the Kingdom to reinforce traditional arts and crafts as authentic cultural heritage.
The initiative aims to promote the practice, preservation, documentation and integration of handicrafts into modern life, celebrating a cultural legacy central to national identity, a Saudi Press Agency report said.
It seeks to support artisans, enhance their skills and prevent traditional crafts from disappearing. It emphasizes manual crafts made using simple tools, without modern technology.
Prominent crafts include Sadu weaving, mud building, wood carving, pottery, hand embroidery, and palm frond products such as baskets and mats.
Engraving on doors with Najdi motifs is another traditional art for which the Najd region is renowned, the SPA reported.
Artisan Ali Al-Jasser, known for Najdi door engraving, shared his journey from basic wooden installations to intricate three-dimensional pieces blending tradition with contemporary art.
He noted regional variations — at Najdi in the center, Al-Qatt Al-Asiri in the south, Rawashin in the west, Bab Al-Bahr in the east, and Sadu in the north.
Another artisan, Nouf Al-Suwailim, highlighted that Najdi door engravings were key elements of traditional Najdi architecture, reflecting its cultural and urban identity.
She described the doors’ elegant designs, featuring geometric and floral patterns enhanced by decorative iron nails.
International Clinical Pharmacy Ambulatory Care Conference brought together more than 700 healthcare professionals and experts.
Updated 4 min 3 sec ago
Arab News
Experts discuss innovations in clinical pharmacy
Two-day event aimed to showcase innovative solutions to improve healthcare quality and align with global advancements
Updated 4 min 3 sec ago
Arab News
RIYADH: The International Clinical Pharmacy Ambulatory Care Conference, organized by the Hail Health Cluster, brought together more than 700 healthcare professionals and leading international experts in health and pharmaceutical sciences.
The two-day event aimed to showcase innovative solutions to improve healthcare quality and align with global advancements, the Saudi Press Agency reported on Sunday. It provided a key platform for knowledge sharing and collaboration.
Discussions covered the latest in virtual health, strategies to enhance the patient experience along the medication journey, and future models for expanding pharmacy services.
Conference highlights included research poster presentations featuring innovations and evidence-based practices in clinical pharmacy, the SPA added.
An accompanying exhibition featured cutting-edge technologies and solutions from participating organizations, reinforcing the role of pharmacy in driving primary care innovation.
Ayathon brings together programmers, designers, researchers and Islamic scholars to develop digital tools supporting memorization, recitation and reflection on the Qur’an
Updated 8 min 16 sec ago
Hebshi Alshammari
RIYADH: Ayathon, a Qur’an-focused app development hackathon organized by the Programmers Association, recently concluded in Riyadh.
Abdulaziz Al-Oraij, chairman of the association, described Ayathon as an initiative to use modern technology to serve the Holy Qur’an and improve the digital experience for users worldwide.
He added that Ayathon brings together programmers, designers, researchers and Islamic scholars to develop digital tools supporting memorization, recitation and reflection on the Qur’an.
“It aims to empower Qur’anic communities with interactive tools,” Al-Oraij said.
Mohammed Al-Wadee, chairman of the hackathon’s committee, said the event seeks to improve Qur’anic apps and develop technology that aligns with Islamic values.
He added that the event promotes integrating technologies like artificial intelligence, augmented reality and user experience design into sustainable projects.
Maha Al-Atwi, chair of the technical committee, said Ayathon combines technical creativity and intellectual depth to motivate participants, and enhance results through interdisciplinary collaboration.
She added that using technologies like AI and data analytics helps create digital solutions meeting diverse user needs and offering a quality Qur’anic experience for the digital generation.
The judging panel includes international experts in technology and Islamic studies, ensuring projects are evaluated on innovation, quality and meaningful content, Al-Atwi said.
RIYADH: Six Saudi students won six medals at the 29th Junior Balkan Mathematical Olympiad in North Macedonia from June 24 to 29, with 135 students from 23 countries participating.
The Saudi team earned two gold, two silver and two bronze medals, showing their strong performance internationally, the Saudi Press Agency reported on Sunday.
This success follows years of training led by the King Abdulaziz and His Companions Foundation for Giftedness and Creativity, in partnership with the Ministry of Education, aimed at preparing gifted students for global contests.
Team members were chosen through rigorous tests under the National Program for Gifted Identification and trained by local and international experts, the SPA added.
This was ֱ’s 14th participation in the Olympiad, bringing its total medals to 11 gold, 24 silver and 29 bronze.
In the previous event, ֱ won one silver and four bronze medals.
The Olympiad, launched in 1997, is held annually for students under 15, with up to six participants per country. It rotates among Balkan countries and Cyprus and is a respected regional mathematics competition.
ֱ welcomes US-brokered peace agreement between Rwanda and DR Congo
Saudi Ministry of Foreign Affairs: Kingdom hopes accord would meet “the hopes and aspirations of two peoples for development and prosperity”
Updated 28 June 2025
Arab News
RIYADH: ֱ has welcomed the signing of a peace agreement between Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, in a deal facilitated by the United States with support from Qatar, the Saudi Press Agency reported.
In a statement issued on Saturday, the Saudi Ministry of Foreign Affairs said the Kingdom hoped the accord would meet “the hopes and aspirations of the two peoples for development and prosperity,” and contribute to “regional and international security and peace.”
The ministry also praised “the diplomatic efforts and constructive role played by the United States of America and the State of Qatar in this regard.”
The agreement, finalized on Friday, aims to de-escalate long-running tensions between Rwanda and the DRC, which have intensified in recent years over accusations of mutual support for armed rebel groups operating along their shared border.
The most prominent of these is the M23 militia, which Kinshasa has accused Rwanda of backing — a charge Kigali denies.
Efforts to mediate between the two neighbours have gained urgency amid a worsening humanitarian crisis in eastern DRC, where conflict has displaced more than seven million people.
The US and Qatar have played key roles in recent months in bringing the two sides to the table for talks, culminating in the formal agreement to ease hostilities and commit to renewed dialogue.
Seventeen artists and collectives have had their work on display at ‘Internet Cafe,’ an exhibition inspired by the digital age.
Updated 29 June 2025
Nada Alturki
Jeddah exhibition gives internet cafes an artistic reboot
Local artists revive communal, quirky, deeply human qualities of early web era
Updated 29 June 2025
Nada Alturki
JEDDAH: Internet cafes in Jeddah were once popular spots with pay-by-the-hour internet access; they have now provided the inspiration for the city’s latest exhibition.
In a collaboration between Kham Space and Estiraha, 17 artists and collectives have had their work on display at “Internet Cafe,” an eight-day exhibition which explored the concept of connection and intimacy in the digital age.
Asaad Badawi’s installation paid tribute to early programmer culture. (Supplied)
Abeer Sultan, who curated the exhibition alongside Mbarak Madhi and Fai Ahmed, spoke to Arab News about the early process in contemplating the theme.
The idea for the exhibition, which concluded on Saturday, stemmed from an exasperation over incessant scrolling, and the deluge of information that has usurped our daily lives.
HIGHLIGHTS
• The idea for the Jeddah exhibition stemmed from an exasperation over incessant scrolling, and the deluge of information that has usurped our daily lives.
• Some of the works were meant to act as ‘hyperlinks’ to connect ideas, as well as creating a communal space and mimicking the social space of a cafe.
She said: “We wanted to do something that is about us now, and maybe the future as well; not only going back to things for nostalgia or the good old days, as they say.
‘Closed eyes under a sunny sky I’ by Zahiyah Alraddadi. (Supplied)
“Maybe it has something that we can use today, especially now that there’s a movement of people trying to slow down, using dumbified devices throughout the internet.”
Instead of creating a literal internet cafe, the curators focused more on the nuances a cybercafe used to have.
"F.A.R." by Dalal Madhi's work. (Supplied)
Their approach to the space was categorized into three themes: “Disconnected Understanding, Linked Source,” “In the Shadow of a Doubt, Light My Screen,” and “Whirling Algorithms of a Distant Dream.”
Artist Zahiyah Alraddadi, who usually paints works focusing on the significance of the mundane, took oil to canvas to paint “Closed Eyes Under a Sunny Sky I” and “Familiar Features.”
The a piece by Ahaad Alamoudi, “Land of Dreams” takes a humorous approach. (Supplied)
Her work feels meditative and was intended to slow visitors down as they walked through the space — much like the feel of a buffering screen page.
Some of the works were meant to act as “hyperlinks” to connect ideas, as well as creating a communal space and mimicking the social space of a cafe.
Studio bin Hattan, which is led by artist Elham Dawsari, displays “Cultural Override” derived from her father’s archives from the 80s, who was interested in computer graphics. (Supplied)
Anhar Salem’s work “After Now” was a curtain imprinted with thumbnails of YouTube videos. The artist conducted a survey asking people between the ages of 18 and 40 to share their YouTube video recommendations, making up a curtain of information overload.
Next to that, Tara O‛Conal’s video installation was a film sequence — but the catch is, nothing really happened. The film continued to load, glitch, and reload, perhaps suggesting commentary on our constant yearning for contact.
Hayfa Al-Gwaiz’s “Long Distance” is a painted form of FaceTime video calls. The work explores digital intimacy by centering not the callers’ faces, but the ceilings above them. (Supplied)
“Compared to Anhar’s work, (Tara’s) feels like a pond, in a way, to look at,” Sultan said.
Some works were inspired by computer graphics. Asaad Badawi paid tribute to early programmer culture via telephone-book-inspired art, and his father, who is a programmer.
Madhawi Al-Gwaiz's works are painted in a graphic style that is reminiscent of early 00s and '10s graphics styles. (Supplied)
Studio bin Hattan, which is led by artist Elham Dawsari, displayed “Cultural Override,” derived from her father’s archives from the 1980s. Madhawi Al-Gwaiz paints in a style that echoes digital graphics from the early 2000s.
Others took a more distanced approach. ThirdSpace’s “Untitled Table” was a physical object, but the research behind it was about keyboards that then shifted to Hijazi architecture, drawing on the iconography and architectural languages across the history of the region.
Tara O‛conal’s video installation is a film sequence in nature—but the catch is, nothing really happens. The film continues to glitch and reload, perhaps suggesting commentary on our constant yearning for contact. (Supplied)
Hayfa Al-Gwaiz’s “Long Distance” was a painted form of facetime video calls. The work explored digital intimacy by showcasing not the callers’ faces, but the ceilings above them — a scene that’s familiar to anyone who has taken up a long-winded video call with a loved one and set down the phone to cater to life’s more immediate demands.
While the exhibition tackled the digital boom personified through cybercafes, it notably avoided artificial intelligence.
Sultan explained: “It is the idea of being fast and efficient, which is what we are resisting with AI … It’s dominating the internet in a weird way, and we wanted a space where people customized things manually, going back to montadayat (domains) where people had to do things by themselves. There’s no template.”
The last piece was by Ahaad Alamoudi, and “Land of Dreams” took a humorous approach to directing audiences to their dreams. As you walked toward the work, in an outdoor area outside the confines of the exhibition space, visitors were met with vinyl boards of the iconic Emirati singer Ahlam.
Sultan said: “The work accentuates the fact that the dream land is a subjective experience or idea, and everyone would have their own imagination of what that is, whether it's Ahlam or something else.”
The “Internet Cafe” was a love letter to a new digital age — one that is sustainable, communal, and deliberately slow.
“This is our way of keeping in touch with other people. An exhibition space is also a space where people meet, even if it’s for a moment, to have these conversations together, which is really important,” Sultan said.