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Film Commission to launch third Saudi Film Confex in October

The third Saudi Film Confex will be held from Oct. 22-25 in Riyadh. (AN file/Huda Bashatah)
The third Saudi Film Confex will be held from Oct. 22-25 in Riyadh. (AN file/Huda Bashatah)
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Film Commission to launch third Saudi Film Confex in October

The third Saudi Film Confex will be held from Oct. 22-25 in Riyadh. (AN file/Huda Bashatah)
  • Event will attract leading filmmakers, producers, industry specialists

RIYADH: The Saudi Ministry of Culture’s Film Commission is preparing to launch the third Saudi Film Confex from Oct. 22-25 in Riyadh.

The event, called “A Gathering That Transforms the Scene,” will bring together leading filmmakers, local and international producers, and industry specialists from across the global cinematic sector, the Saudi Press Agency reported.

Building on the momentum of previous events, the confex will strengthen its role as a catalyst for the growth and empowerment of the Saudi film industry.

FASTFACT

This year’s Saudi Film Confex will strengthen its role as a catalyst for the growth and empowerment of the Saudi film industry.

Initiatives include driving investment, fostering strategic partnerships, and aligning with the Kingdom’s National Culture Strategy under Vision 2030, which places cultural development among its top priorities.

Positioned as a dynamic networking platform, the Saudi Film Confex connects all players in the filmmaking ecosystem, from production and distribution companies to technical and logistical service providers, as well as investors and funding institutions.

The event will highlight filming and production opportunities, encourage high-value collaborations, reinforce the nation’s film infrastructure, and support startups and entrepreneurs in the sector.

It will include an international conference featuring more than 30 panel discussions and workshops, and covering topics such as film financing, content development, and regulatory frameworks.

The program will also include side events and specialized workshops designed to introduce audiences and young talent to career paths and professional specializations within the industry.

The confex will host an expanded exhibition with more than 130 local, regional, and international participants, with dedicated areas for stakeholders including production companies, equipment rental and cinematic technology providers, streaming, distribution, and government and strategic partners.

The exhibition will also feature participants from related sectors, including educational institutions, film associations, and funding and investment bodies.

Exhibitor registration for the Saudi Film Confex 2025 is now open to local and global companies as well as government and regulatory entities.

Registered exhibitors will have the opportunity to present their projects, showcase the latest innovations and opportunities across the film industry value chain, and build strategic partnerships that will drive market growth and strengthen the Kingdom’s global presence.

The upcoming confex is expanding its content and activities to highlight the industry’s growing economic impact and elevate Saudi talent on the world stage, supporting the creation of a competitive Saudi film sector.


Tabuk sports event boosts community health

Tabuk Central Park saw community participation in the Move With Us, Tabuk sports program.
Tabuk Central Park saw community participation in the Move With Us, Tabuk sports program.
Updated 31 August 2025

Tabuk sports event boosts community health

Tabuk Central Park saw community participation in the Move With Us, Tabuk sports program.
  • The program attracted hundreds of people of all ages and backgrounds, with activities that included running, bicycle races and fitness exercises

RIYADH: Tabuk Central Park saw community participation in the Move With Us, Tabuk sports program, which was organized by the Saudi Sports for All Federation to promote physical activity and spread a culture of sports as a way of life.

The program attracted hundreds of people of all ages and backgrounds, with activities that included running, bicycle races and fitness exercises. Educational booths also featured, the Saudi Press Agency reported.

The event aligned with the federation’s efforts to achieve the goals of Vision 2030, which aims to increase the percentage of those involved in sports.

The program is part of a series of initiatives aimed at developing youth capabilities, encouraging continued sports practice, and promoting a healthy and active lifestyle. 


Program launched to boost entrepreneurial growth in Kingdom

Program launched to boost entrepreneurial growth in Kingdom
Updated 31 August 2025

Program launched to boost entrepreneurial growth in Kingdom

Program launched to boost entrepreneurial growth in Kingdom
  • With financial awards, industrial land, consulting support for previous winners, the program equips projects to scale, compete

RIYADH: Minister of Industry and Mineral Resources Bandar Alkhorayef launched the fourth 1K Mile Program in Riyadh, the Saudi Press Agency reported on Sunday.

The launch took place during the closing ceremony of the third edition, attended by entrepreneurs, representatives of supporting entities, and participants’ families.

Minister of Transport and Logistic Services Saleh Al-Jasser, Minister of Communications and Information Technology Abdullah Al-Swaha and Minister of Education Yousef Al-Benyan also attended.

Alkhorayef, who is also chairman of the National Industrial Development and Logistics Program, said the 1K Mile Program has evolved from an initiative supporting entrepreneurs into a key pillar of the Kingdom’s industrial and entrepreneurial transformation.

He said that the fourth edition reflects the successes of previous editions and the inspiring stories they produced, the SPA added.

Alkhorayef said the program empowers entrepreneurs by helping them develop realistic, sustainable business plans while providing support throughout their projects, ensuring growth, expansion, and readiness to compete.

He emphasized that the program has redefined industrial investment, showing that industry is no longer limited to large enterprises but open to ambitious, innovative young people.

He also highlighted its role in promoting advanced manufacturing and encouraging investment in modern technologies, according to the SPA.

There were 8,001 entrepreneurs registered for the third edition, with 147 projects nominated for aligning with Vision 2030 goals.

The Saudi Investment Bank, the ceremony’s official sponsor, presented financial awards to 20 pioneering projects in the industrial, mining, and logistics sectors.

First-place winners received SR500,000 ($133,000), while second-place winners in each sector received SR250,000.

Program winners also receive an official document offering unique benefits, including financing, industrial land, ready-made factories, and consulting services, designed to support the sustainability and growth of their projects.


Literary week engages children, families in cultural activities

Literary week engages children, families in cultural activities
Updated 31 August 2025

Literary week engages children, families in cultural activities

Literary week engages children, families in cultural activities

RIYADH: The Children’s Literary Week, organized by the Literature, Publishing and Translation Commission, is being held at the Culture Center in Sakaka, Jouf region.

It will run until Sept. 4, the Saudi Press Agency reported on Sunday.

Abdullatif Alwasel, the commission’s CEO, said the event is part of ongoing efforts to promote literary culture across the Kingdom while giving children opportunities to express their creativity.

He added that it will help build a literate, creative generation in line with the National Culture Strategy and Vision 2030.

The week features workshops for children and parents, as well as participation from specialists in developing children’s talents.

It also includes theatrical performances, literary competitions, interactive activities, artistic programs, and storytelling sessions, the SPA reported.

Educational and interactive corners are designed to nurture children’s imaginations and strengthen their connection with reading and literature from an early age.

Held across five regions over a week, the event aims to foster a passion for reading, storytelling, and writing among children and parents.

It also seeks to enhance children’s reading skills and intellectual abilities, raise cultural awareness, and encourage engagement in cultural and creative activities.


Saudi king, crown prince extend condolences to Kuwaiti rulers over death of Sheikh Ali Abdullah Al-Khalifa Al-Sabah

Saudi king, crown prince extend condolences to Kuwaiti rulers over death of Sheikh Ali Abdullah Al-Khalifa Al-Sabah
Updated 30 August 2025

Saudi king, crown prince extend condolences to Kuwaiti rulers over death of Sheikh Ali Abdullah Al-Khalifa Al-Sabah

Saudi king, crown prince extend condolences to Kuwaiti rulers over death of Sheikh Ali Abdullah Al-Khalifa Al-Sabah

RIYADH: Ƶ’s King Salman and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman on Saturday sent separate cables of condolences to the Emir of Kuwait, Sheikh Meshal Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah, following the death of Sheikh Ali Abdullah Al-Khalifa Al-Sabah.

The king and crown prince expressed their deepest sympathies to the Emir and the family of the deceased, the Saudi Press Agency reported.

Prince Mohammed also sent a cable of condolences to Kuwait’s Crown Prince Sheikh Sabah Khaled Al-Hamad Al-Mubarak Al-Sabah, offering his sympathy to the family.


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 30 August 2025

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.