ֱ

Saudi artist transforms scrap metal into sculpture

Saudi artist transforms scrap metal into sculpture
1 / 6
Mishal Al-Amri recently held his first exhibition under the theme The Neglected. (Supplied)
Saudi artist transforms scrap metal into sculpture
2 / 6
Mishal Al-Amri has been upcycling waste materials from the streets of Jeddah into artwork for 20 years. (Supplied)
Saudi artist transforms scrap metal into sculpture
3 / 6
Mishal Al-Amri has been upcycling waste materials from the streets of Jeddah into artwork for 20 years. (Supplied)
Saudi artist transforms scrap metal into sculpture
4 / 6
Mishal Al-Amri has been upcycling waste materials from the streets of Jeddah into artwork for 20 years. (Supplied)
Saudi artist transforms scrap metal into sculpture
5 / 6
Mishal Al-Amri has been upcycling waste materials from the streets of Jeddah into artwork for 20 years. (Supplied)
Saudi artist transforms scrap metal into sculpture
6 / 6
Mishal Al-Amri has been upcycling waste materials from the streets of Jeddah into artwork for 20 years. (Supplied)
Short Url
Updated 22 July 2025

Saudi artist transforms scrap metal into sculpture

Saudi artist transforms scrap metal into sculpture
  • Mishal Al-Amri has been upcycling waste materials into artwork for 20 years
  • He recently held his first public exhibition under the theme 'The Neglected'

JEDDAH: Where others see scrap metal destined for the trash, Saudi artist Mishal Al-Amri sees opportunities to create artwork.

In his bustling studio in Jeddah, Al-Amri works to remove rust before cutting, rolling, shaping and joining thousands of pieces of shaped scrap metal by hand.

He has been upcycling unwanted bits of metal throughout his artistic career, which has spanned 20 years.

“The artist has an eye that sees what others cannot; an eye that captures the beauty in the heart of the damaged and neglected, and restores it to life and meaning. My ultimate hope and goal are to give scrap metal a new life,” Al-Amri told Arab News.

When growing up, Al-Amri loved to draw. As he got older, he started painting. It was not until he retired at the age of 59 that he discovered his true passion and began sculpting with recycled metal after teaching himself how to weld.

“As I said before, it was just a hobby and I stopped it for a long time after I joined the banking sector due to the difficulty of balancing the hobby, the job, and then the family later on.

“Anyhow, when I was approaching 40 years of age, and after having a family and professional job, I began to pursue my artistic journey once again. I worked on paintings during my free time and vacations, and I lived for nearly 26 years just painting, readings, attending art seminars, workshops, and holding exhibitions alongside other local artists.”

Speaking about how he started collecting scrap metal items from the street, the 65-year-old said: “The spark for this artistic journey was the first moments of an evening walk, when my eyes would trace the floor littered with scraps of plastic, scraps of iron and discarded remnants of lighting and plumbing, no longer fit for use or neglected.”

He added: “These pieces I picked up from the streets would become the core of my personal art collection — materials I plucked from the fate of neglect to submit to my ideas and participate in the creation of beauty.”

These materials can end up waiting for days and sometimes years in storage in his studio until an idea suddenly emerges.

“The journey of constructing the painting or sculpture begins; from choosing the colors and sizes of the pieces, to weaving the relationships between them into an artistic composition that gives it a new spirit.”

The ֱn Society for Culture and Arts recently hosted his first solo exhibition showcasing under the theme “The Neglected.”

“This exhibition is the fruit of those moments; an invitation to see the beauty in the unusual, and to contemplate art’s ability to redefine what is damaged and neglected to ultimately become more precious and valuable,” he said.

“My artistic experience in this exhibition is based on two complementary principles: First, protecting the environment from the effects of pollution and human-caused damage, by collecting remnants of harmful materials in the soil and saving them from becoming a burden on the earth.

“Second, sustaining the usefulness of objects, by recycling them and using them in the field of art after their original function has ended, reborn as works of art that convey an aesthetic, humanitarian and environmental message.

Al-Amri says that he plans to continue creating scrap metal sculptures and paintings.

“On a personal level, I want to reopen the Cezanne Fine Arts Center, which I founded years ago and continue to cultivate art until its very end.

“On a more general level, I strive to raise environmental awareness, enabling people to respect and preserve the environment.”


Paperback is back for three days at JAX

Organized by the Diriyah Biennale Foundation, the now-annual event has become a fixture in its cultural calendar. (AN photo)
Organized by the Diriyah Biennale Foundation, the now-annual event has become a fixture in its cultural calendar. (AN photo)
Updated 08 November 2025

Paperback is back for three days at JAX

Organized by the Diriyah Biennale Foundation, the now-annual event has become a fixture in its cultural calendar. (AN photo)
  • This year’s lineup features 30 publishers selected after extensive research by the Biennale team

DIRIYAH: Rows of art books, a DJ spinning records and an endless sea of colorful posters can mean only one thing — the second annual Paperback Art Book Fair is back at JAX District in Diriyah, running for three days and ending this Saturday.

Organized by the Diriyah Biennale Foundation, the now-annual event has become a fixture in its cultural calendar and will continue to take place during the first week of November each year.

Organized by the Diriyah Biennale Foundation, the now-annual event has become a fixture in its cultural calendar. (AN photo)

“Paperback happens at JAX — a very creative district that houses multiple creative tenants across the board, from artists to creative organizations, businesses, you name it,” Sybel Vazquez, director of public programs at the Biennale, told Arab News.

“Paperback is happening between the two biennales,” she said, referring to the Islamic Arts and Contemporary Art Biennales, which now open in January each year over the past half decade.

HIGHLIGHT

Two new book launches headline the event: ‘Raw, Print, Scripted Spaces’ by Jeddah-based architecture and design studio Bricklab, co-founded by brothers Abdulrahman and Turki Gazzaz, and ‘Dwelling Futures: Future of Gulf Housing’ by the UAE-based Sawalif Collective.

“We have a lot of contemporary artists who are self-published or work with books as a medium — there’s at least one artist that is in the biennale that actually also has a booth at Paperback.”

The second annual Paperback Art Book Fair is back at JAX District in Diriyah, running for three days and ending this Saturday. (AN photo)

Vazquez added that the fair is designed to encourage curiosity and creative experimentation.

“Paperback is also to nurture print culture. It is really a celebration of creative publishing,” she said.

Organized by the Diriyah Biennale Foundation, the now-annual event has become a fixture in its cultural calendar. (AN photo)

“The reason why Paperback exists is because we want to create a gathering for print culture … Paperback is intended to spark conversation, exchange and learning for what is still very nascent locally.”

When the first event debuted last year, the response far exceeded expectations.

“We had no idea if there would be a demand for art books,” she confessed — but her worries were unjustified.

“People came by the thousands. We ran out of books very quickly — too quickly,” Vazquez said. “It’s a good problem to have but nonetheless a problem because people kept coming in. There was nothing left.”

This year’s lineup features 30 publishers selected after extensive research by the Biennale team.

Three Saudi participants: Rawdah Print, Bin Atiah Studio and Misk Art Institute join international exhibitors from places such as Spain, Italy, Japan, the US, Egypt, Greece, China and Malaysia, among other countries.

Two new book launches headline the event: “Raw, Print, Scripted Spaces” by Jeddah-based architecture and design studio Bricklab, co-founded by brothers Abdulrahman and Turki Gazzaz, and “Dwelling Futures: Future of Gulf Housing” by the UAE-based Sawalif Collective.

Workshops during the three-day program include “Making Zines for Kids” and “Bookmaking: Pamphlets, Concertinas, Japanese Binding,” both by Saudi-based Creative Girls Club, as well as sessions led by other publishers.

Among the returning participants is “Reliable Copy,” a publishing house and curatorial practice founded in Bangalore, India, in 2018. 

Sarasija Subramanian of “Reliable Copy” told Arab News that the atmosphere at Paperback stood out from larger fairs abroad.

“Last year was amazing,” she said. “This is very different from the other fairs that we’ve done because usually we do fairs in Europe and the USA, which are exponentially larger — like 200 publishers instead of 30. It’s a lot more warm and friendly because it’s smaller and easier to access.”

She added that the more intimate setting allows readers to interact one-on-one with publishers.

“Everything (for sale at their booth) is an artist’s book — everything is either by an artist or with an artist. But what the individual books are is a very wide range; there’s a cookbook, a bunch of photo books, some science fiction.”

“I think the general audience response is really, really great. Even last time, most of the publishers sold out— that’s not something you often experience,” she added.  

Also returning is Shashasha, an online bookshop based in Tokyo that specializes in photobooks and artbooks. They came armed with just under 100 books last year and sold-out quickly, so they doubled their offerings this time around.

A Japanese graduate student — who had a badge adorned with the name-tag Keishin — told Arab News about his sophomore participation.

“Since last year, Shashasha has been invited to this event, and I was the only one studying Islam, so I was entrusted with this. I’m at an age where anything I experience is useful, so I’m enjoying it,” he said.

For Vazquez and the Biennale Foundation, the goal remains simple; to make books accessible, tactile and a catalyst for community.

“Print is not dead — print is back on Nov. 6-8!” she said.