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Ithra’s Japan Cultural Days draws more than 200k visitors to Dhahran

Japanese Ambassador to Ƶ Morino Yasunari toured the exhibitions and highlighted the importance of strengthening cultural ties between the two countries. (Supplied)
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Japanese Ambassador to Ƶ Morino Yasunari toured the exhibitions and highlighted the importance of strengthening cultural ties between the two countries. (Supplied)
Ithra’s Japan Cultural Days draws more than 200k visitors to Dhahran
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A variety of activities were offered for children and adults, ensuring everyone's enjoyment. (Supplied)
Ithra’s Japan Cultural Days draws more than 200k visitors to Dhahran
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A variety of activities were offered for children and adults, ensuring everyone's enjoyment. (Supplied)
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Updated 09 February 2025

Ithra’s Japan Cultural Days draws more than 200k visitors to Dhahran

Ithra’s Japan Cultural Days draws more than 200k visitors to Dhahran
  • Ithra’s Japan Cultural Days featured many other activities, ensuring that visitors could engage with Japan’s cultural heritage through a variety of creative, educational and interactive experiencesIthra’s Japan Cultural Days featured many other activities

DHAHRAN: Ithra’s Japan Cultural Days concluded on Saturday after a dynamic 17-day run, offering visitors a deep and immersive experience into Japanese arts, traditions and contemporary culture.

The event, which began on Jan. 23, attracted more than 200,000 visitors in its first 10 days.




A variety of activities were offered for children and adults, ensuring everyone's enjoyment. (Supplied)

Japanese Ambassador to Ƶ Morino Yasunari toured the exhibitions, engaged with artists and cultural representatives, and highlighted the importance of strengthening cultural ties between the two countries.

His visit underscored the significance of the festival in fostering dialogue and mutual appreciation.




A wide variety of music was featured at the festival, from meditative shakuhachi to high-energy drums. (Supplied)

The program featured a wide range of activities for both children and adults, ensuring an engaging experience for all ages. Families took part in hands-on craft workshops, traditional calligraphy, origami and manga drawing sessions, while younger visitors enjoyed storytelling sessions featuring Japanese folktales and legends.

One of the most anticipated performances came from Drum Tao, the globally renowned Japanese drumming ensemble known for its powerful stage presence and theatrical performances.




A variety of activities were offered for children and adults, ensuring everyone's enjoyment. (Supplied)

The group combined traditional taiko drumming with modern choreography and lighting effects, delivering a high-energy spectacle that captivated audiences.

A metaverse experience in Ithra’s plaza allowed visitors to explore virtual Japanese markets and cultural celebrations.




A wide variety of music was featured at the festival, from meditative shakuhachi to high-energy drums. (Supplied)

The festival also explored Japanese storytelling through literature and anime. Several sessions on Japanese literature highlighted its unique introspective nature, referencing authors like Haruki Murakami.

Music played a central role in the festival, with performances ranging from the meditative tones of the shakuhachi flute to high-energy drum ensembles. Visitors also explored Japanese culinary traditions, gaining insights into the precision and artistry behind dishes such as sushi and wagashi.




A variety of activities were offered for children and adults, ensuring everyone's enjoyment. (Supplied)

One of the most celebrated workshops covered kintsugi, the Japanese art of repairing broken pottery with gold. Attendees were invited to transform shattered ceramics into decorative pieces, embracing the philosophy of finding beauty in imperfection.

Ithra’s Japan Cultural Days featured many other activities, ensuring that visitors could engage with Japan’s cultural heritage through a variety of creative, educational and interactive experiences.


Between pen and performance, a Saudi artist redraws boundaries

The pen is Ahmad Haddad’s main instrument to explore the human body, identity, and cultural boundaries. (Supplied)
The pen is Ahmad Haddad’s main instrument to explore the human body, identity, and cultural boundaries. (Supplied)
Updated 2 min 46 sec ago

Between pen and performance, a Saudi artist redraws boundaries

The pen is Ahmad Haddad’s main instrument to explore the human body, identity, and cultural boundaries. (Supplied)
  • Ahmad Haddad casts a fresh eye on tradition, masculinity, and movement

JEDDAH: For Ahmad Haddad, art is both a personal and cultural inquiry, with pen marks, traditional dress, and performance converging to question boundaries and preserve heritage through vivid experiences.

The 30-year-old Riyadh-based artist and certified arts educator grew up between Jeddah and Madinah, and works across drawing, digital collage, mixed media, and performance.

The pen is Ahmad Haddad’s main instrument to explore the human body, identity, and cultural boundaries. (Supplied)

The pen is his main instrument to explore the human body, identity, and cultural boundaries. His approach is shaped by his studies in psychology, landscape architecture, and marketing.

“I use art to make the unseen visible and to reimagine the familiar,” Haddad told Arab News. “I’m driven by questions like: What happens when the invisible becomes visible? And how do symbols and boundaries shape space?”

HIGHLIGHTS

• Ahmad Haddad has exhibited in more than 25 national and international exhibitions, including ‘The Lost Other’ in Paris (2025) and ‘Delicacy of Dualities’ in Riyadh (2024).

• He has also collaborated with Misk Art Institute, Misk Global Forum, Riyadh Art, and the Visual Arts Commission.

• He founded Haddad Studio in Riyadh’s Jax District; the space has hosted more than 120 workshops and programs.

Haddad has exhibited in more than 25 national and international exhibitions, including “The Lost Other in Paris” (2025), “Delicacy of Dualities” in Riyadh (2024), “Sindbad: I See the Land” in Jeddah (2023), and his solo show “Reflection” in Jeddah (2020).

The pen is Ahmad Haddad’s main instrument to explore the human body, identity, and cultural boundaries. (Supplied)

He has also collaborated with Misk Art Institute, Misk Global Forum, Riyadh Art, and the Visual Arts Commission.

He has twice taken part in the Intermix Residency. In Diriyah last year, he developed a research-based project on the boundaries of beauty in Eastern masculinity. In Paris earlier this year, he extended that inquiry to explore how traditional clothing shapes movement and presence.

The pen is Ahmad Haddad’s main instrument to explore the human body, identity, and cultural boundaries. (Supplied)

His Paris installation, “Ya Ibn ‘Ammi,” examined solitude and individuality through traditional symbols such as the agal.

Sound design linked Saudi and French cultural elements in the work. “It is almost unimaginable to see a traditional Bedouin man in a setting that compromises his dignity, moving with excessive fluidity or softness, or even lowering his gaze,” Haddad explained. “These unspoken codes profoundly shape our perception of a man’s role in society.”

The pen is Ahmad Haddad’s main instrument to explore the human body, identity, and cultural boundaries. (Supplied)

Haddad is preparing to publish his research on traditional dress, which he believes may lead to a follow-up study on how fabric, color, and comfort influence male personality and movement.

His visual language blends anatomy, Qur’anic symbols, geometry, subconscious marks, and forms inspired by Saudi culture and Hijazi heritage.

The pen is Ahmad Haddad’s main instrument to explore the human body, identity, and cultural boundaries. (Supplied)

His creative process often begins with a blue ballpoint pen, followed by acrylics, pastels, and collage on paper, fabric, cardboard, or digital screens.

“A pen records hesitation, weakness, strength, and confidence all at once,” he said. “As children, we weren’t allowed to use one until we turned 10. Unlike a pencil, a pen offers no eraser — its marks are permanent. That permanence became part of me.”

“I always seek the hidden form before the visible one appears,” he added.

Blue ink carries deep meaning for him: “I see it as the color of truth — the hue of universal laws before Earth existed. It’s the color I glimpse in the symbols behind my closed eyes: a blend of divinity, mystery, mortality, and truth.”

In addition to his art practice, Haddad founded Haddad Studio in Riyadh’s Jax District. The space has hosted more than 120 workshops and programs in 16 Saudi cities, fostering what he calls “sustainable creative communities.”

“Audience engagement is key in some of my projects,” he said. “I produce yearly works based on public interaction.”

Currently, he is building a strategic partnership to connect Haddad Studio with Paris. “I’m very selective about my inner circle, almost meticulously so — so it’s easy for me and my friends, despite living in different cities, to share experiences, organize activities, and create workshops that benefit people and exchange knowledge.”

From the permanence of a pen line to the constraints of traditional dress, Haddad is a Saudi artist challenging the boundaries between form, identity, and cultural memory.

 


Literary Creativity competition honors up-and-coming Saudi talent

The competition honored outstanding performers across four literary disciplines at King Fahd Cultural Center. (SPA)
The competition honored outstanding performers across four literary disciplines at King Fahd Cultural Center. (SPA)
Updated 3 min 8 sec ago

Literary Creativity competition honors up-and-coming Saudi talent

The competition honored outstanding performers across four literary disciplines at King Fahd Cultural Center. (SPA)
  • Emerging writers were awarded SR1.2 million across poetry and prose categories

RIYADH: The winners of the second Literary Creativity competition organized by the Literature, Publishing and Translation Commission were announced at a ceremony in Riyadh, the Saudi Press Agency reported on Saturday.

The competition honored “outstanding performers across four literary disciplines” and is intended to “advance talent development and celebrate exceptional practitioners,” the SPA said.

The competition honored outstanding performers across four literary disciplines at King Fahd Cultural Center. (SPA)

Abdullatif Al-Wasel, the commission’s CEO, presided over the event at King Fahd Cultural Center. He “reaffirmed the commission’s commitment to cultivating university-level talent as essential for the growth of Saudi literature” and described the competition as “a vital platform for students to share perspectives, enhance literary skills, and inspire emerging creators across diverse disciplines.”

Al-Wasel highlighted collaborative efforts between the commission and academic institutions to support literary development, noting that the honorees “serve as role models for future generations and strengthen Saudi literature’s cultural impact.”

HIGHLIGHT

Al-Wasel presented awards to the top three winners in each category, and gave away a total of SR1.2 million ($320,000) in prize money. In each category, the winner received SR150,000, with SR100,000 and SR50,000 to those in second and third place respectively.

He concluded by thanking Minister of Culture Prince Badr bin Abdullah bin Farhan, who is also chairman of the commission, for his support of the cultural sector.

The competition honored outstanding performers across four literary disciplines at King Fahd Cultural Center. (SPA)

Al-Wasel presented awards to the top three winners in each category, and gave away a total of SR1.2 million ($320,000) in prize money. In each category, the winner received SR150,000, with SR100,000 and SR50,000 to those in second and third place respectively.

In classical poetry, Ahmed Al-Turki claimed first place, followed by Luay Al-Makrami and Faisal Al-Qaisi.

In Nabati poetry, Hani Al-Otaibi was the winner, with Muteb Al-Sulami as runner-up and Abdullah Al-Harthi in third.

In the novel category, Amira Al-Subaie came first, Zainab Al-Qaisoum second, and Mahdi Al-Abdulatif third.

In the short story category, Raihana Al-Saadan took first place, followed by Fatima Al-Darwish and Rana Al-Juhani.

The Literary Creativity competition, the SPA wrote, “reflects the commission’s mission to energize the Kingdom’s literary scene and showcase emerging talent across creative writing disciplines” while “supporting cultural heritage preservation and literature’s integration into society … reinforcing Saudi literature’s global presence and cultural influence.”

 


‘Cities Under Quarantine’ exhibit opens at Diriyah contemporary art museum

‘Cities Under Quarantine’ exhibit opens at Diriyah contemporary art museum
Updated 37 sec ago

‘Cities Under Quarantine’ exhibit opens at Diriyah contemporary art museum

‘Cities Under Quarantine’ exhibit opens at Diriyah contemporary art museum
  • The project originated from an initiative by Abed Al-Kadiri, who distributed 57 handmade books to Arab artists worldwide, inviting them to respond creatively to the reality of lockdown

RIYADH: An exhibition called “Cities Under Quarantine: The Mailbox Project” opened at the Ƶ Museum of Contemporary Art in Diriyah on Thursday, the Saudi Press Agency reported.

The show, organized by the Museums Commission, runs until Sept. 28 and showcases artists’ books created by Arab artists during the COVID-19 pandemic that capture the profound global isolation that reshaped life in spring 2020.

Visitors will encounter “intimate testimonies that merge art, writing, and personal reflections, reflecting that extraordinary moment that unsettled the world and redefined human connection,” the SPA reported.

The project originated from an initiative by Abed Al-Kadiri, who distributed 57 handmade books to Arab artists worldwide, inviting them to respond creatively to the reality of lockdown.

“The responses became deeply personal works that reimagined places, desires, and silences, transforming solitude into a space for reflection,” the SPA added.

Ƶ is the exhibition’s third stop, following Villa Romana in Florence and Mathaf: Arab Museum of Modern Art in Doha.

The exhibition “explores life in suspension during the pandemic, where confinement reshaped human bonds and became a space for reflection and self-discovery,” the SPA stated.

As part of the program, the exhibition hosted two discussions on Saturday: “The Visual Traces of the Self: Between the Hands and the Eyes” and “Printmaking and the Artist’s Book.”

On Sept. 6, the museum’s atrium will hold a live performance titled “Today, I Would Like to Be,” inviting the public to participate in creating an artist’s book.

 


Kingdom arrests 20,319 illegals in one week

Kingdom arrests 20,319 illegals in one week
Updated 30 August 2025

Kingdom arrests 20,319 illegals in one week

Kingdom arrests 20,319 illegals in one week

RIYADH: Saudi authorities arrested 20,319 people in one week for breaching residency, work and border security regulations, the Saudi Press Agency reported on Saturday.

A total of 12,891 people were arrested for violations of residency laws, while 3,888 were held over illegal border crossing attempts, and a further 3,540 for labor-related issues.

The report showed that among the 1,238 people arrested for trying to enter the Kingdom illegally, 50 percent were Yemeni, 49 percent Ethiopian, and 1 percent were of other nationalities.

A further 22 people were caught trying to cross into neighboring countries, and 16 were held for involvement in transporting and harboring violators, the SPA reported.

The Ministry of Interior said that anyone found to be facilitating illegal entry to the Kingdom, including providing transportation and shelter, could face imprisonment for a maximum of 15 years, a fine of up to SR1 million ($267,000), as well as confiscation of vehicles and property.

Suspected violations can be reported on the toll-free number 911 in the Makkah and Riyadh regions, and 999 or 996 in other regions of the Kingdom.


UNESCO, AlUla host intercultural dialogue training

UNESCO, AlUla host intercultural dialogue training
Updated 30 August 2025

UNESCO, AlUla host intercultural dialogue training

UNESCO, AlUla host intercultural dialogue training

Riyadh: The UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization launched its first training program on intercultural dialogue, according to a Saudi Press Agency report.

The program targets professionals in museums and heritage site management, in partnership with the Royal Commission for AlUla, as part of the “Fostering Positive Social Transformations in AlUla” project.

Sessions will be held every Thursday from Sept. 18 to Oct. 16, from noon to 2 p.m. GMT+2 via Zoom, the SPA added.

Participants include museum and World Heritage site representatives, especially those involved in public engagement, learning, and education.

The program covers key concepts in intercultural communication theory and practical applications to facilitate dialogue under the “Live Museum” model.

This model promotes museums and heritage sites as platforms for cultural exchange, using heritage and handicrafts to connect diverse cultures.

UNESCO urged interested applicants to apply by Sept. 5. Accepted participants will be notified one week before the course begins.