The Prague Post - Saudi light festival tries to sell public on arts push

EUR -
AED 4.116844
AFN 78.459331
ALL 98.578508
AMD 433.699411
ANG 2.005951
AOA 1027.814068
ARS 1275.480418
AUD 1.742619
AWG 2.017519
AZN 1.90413
BAM 1.958611
BBD 2.264752
BDT 136.275599
BGN 1.956186
BHD 0.422507
BIF 3289.676468
BMD 1.120844
BND 1.457858
BOB 7.750228
BRL 6.369084
BSD 1.12166
BTN 95.841839
BWP 15.199494
BYN 3.670833
BYR 21968.537915
BZD 2.253114
CAD 1.562294
CDF 3216.821906
CHF 0.934985
CLF 0.027439
CLP 1052.943709
CNY 8.077911
CNH 8.067245
COP 4709.225105
CRC 569.042143
CUC 1.120844
CUP 29.70236
CVE 111.047587
CZK 24.938411
DJF 199.196322
DKK 7.460447
DOP 66.073808
DZD 149.327787
EGP 56.211209
ERN 16.812657
ETB 148.841119
FJD 2.541121
FKP 0.842728
GBP 0.841569
GEL 3.071432
GGP 0.842728
GHS 13.889059
GIP 0.842728
GMD 80.701345
GNF 9701.463987
GTQ 8.617369
GYD 234.666822
HKD 8.755931
HNL 29.086179
HRK 7.529047
HTG 146.606968
HUF 402.864893
IDR 18378.419274
ILS 3.981422
IMP 0.842728
INR 95.930796
IQD 1468.30534
IRR 47187.523243
ISK 144.690147
JEP 0.842728
JMD 178.796631
JOD 0.795012
JPY 162.896688
KES 145.152157
KGS 98.017923
KHR 4503.550725
KMF 493.734814
KPW 1008.715622
KRW 1557.574918
KWD 0.344368
KYD 0.934754
KZT 572.797701
LAK 24232.642364
LBP 100802.745823
LKR 334.795474
LRD 223.720363
LSL 20.208949
LTL 3.30956
LVL 0.677987
LYD 6.181515
MAD 10.410954
MDL 19.539307
MGA 5083.026727
MKD 61.51039
MMK 2353.265414
MNT 4007.178141
MOP 9.021248
MRU 44.407465
MUR 51.693413
MVR 17.328634
MWK 1945.784555
MXN 21.874785
MYR 4.782079
MZN 71.619642
NAD 20.343896
NGN 1795.524059
NIO 41.201899
NOK 11.649232
NPR 153.346943
NZD 1.896168
OMR 0.431382
PAB 1.121625
PEN 4.129748
PGK 4.557363
PHP 62.277437
PKR 315.629416
PLN 4.248958
PYG 8954.853093
QAR 4.080959
RON 5.104775
RSD 117.430697
RUB 89.669901
RWF 1592.718999
SAR 4.204039
SBD 9.363938
SCR 15.935072
SDG 673.068029
SEK 10.880378
SGD 1.450871
SHP 0.880807
SLE 25.384002
SLL 23503.533699
SOS 641.048708
SRD 40.733141
STD 23199.203089
SVC 9.814569
SYP 14572.491305
SZL 20.343841
THB 37.144619
TJS 11.614571
TMT 3.928557
TND 3.382147
TOP 2.625127
TRY 43.554902
TTD 7.617205
TWD 33.742776
TZS 3024.036051
UAH 46.518752
UGX 4093.876028
USD 1.120844
UYU 46.729156
UZS 14542.948205
VES 105.401946
VND 29057.314346
VUV 134.559737
WST 3.099575
XAF 656.92921
XAG 0.034533
XAU 0.000347
XCD 3.029136
XDR 0.823414
XOF 646.726948
XPF 119.331742
YER 273.576731
ZAR 20.199852
ZMK 10088.936787
ZMW 29.954395
ZWL 360.911237
  • RBGPF

    64.5000

    64.5

    +100%

  • CMSC

    0.1350

    22.1

    +0.61%

  • AZN

    1.7300

    67.96

    +2.55%

  • SCS

    -0.0400

    10.5

    -0.38%

  • RELX

    0.9800

    54.04

    +1.81%

  • RYCEF

    0.0100

    10.8

    +0.09%

  • RIO

    0.7200

    62.75

    +1.15%

  • GSK

    1.3500

    37.57

    +3.59%

  • NGG

    2.6000

    70.03

    +3.71%

  • BTI

    0.8200

    41.37

    +1.98%

  • BCC

    0.2500

    90.99

    +0.27%

  • CMSD

    0.1200

    22.38

    +0.54%

  • JRI

    0.1035

    12.74

    +0.81%

  • BCE

    0.3700

    21.63

    +1.71%

  • VOD

    0.2300

    9.27

    +2.48%

  • BP

    -0.2500

    30.11

    -0.83%

Saudi light festival tries to sell public on arts push
Saudi light festival tries to sell public on arts push / Photo: Fayez Nureldine - AFP

Saudi light festival tries to sell public on arts push

Dazzling installations have been lighting up the Saudi capital, bringing a taste of the kingdom's push to become a global arts destination to ordinary Saudis -- not just habitual museum-goers.

Text size:

A massive red orb glowing outside the national library, illuminated rods dotting the riverside at a popular picnic spot, and Arabesque designs projected onto the mud-brick walls of a 130-year-old fort -- these are all part of Noor Riyadh, a city-wide festival.

Saudi curator Jumana Ghouth said she found it "amazing" to see Saudis from different socio-economic backgrounds "interact with the work", given that "we're not really a nation that grew up with art".

Saudi Arabia has generated buzz, and some controversy, in recent years for luring major names in the contemporary art world to shows like Desert X, situated amid the dramatic sandstone mountains of Al-Ula in the thinly populated north.

Noor Riyadh, by contrast, brings light installations to more than 40 locations in a fast-growing city of more than seven million people, many of whom may never consider dropping in on a gallery.

"Specifically those that cannot even afford to travel -– we're bringing art to them," Ghouth said.

The focus on well-trafficked public spaces means "these art pieces just popped up in their comfort zone", said Gaida Almogren, another Saudi curator involved in the festival which opened last week.

"I think that's the role of art: to come and poke, and see how you're reacting."

Launch events for Noor Riyadh included a light show in a park involving 2,000 drones and a rave in the desert outside the city, with the DJ set up underneath a large, glowing inverted pyramid.

Most encounters with the light installations, however, are much more subdued.

One recent night, Adel Shuker wandered with his wife and sister-in-law through a Noor Riyadh installation by Puerto Rican artist Gisela Colon, marvelling at how the light glimmered off a manmade lake nearby.

"The light, how they put it there, how they distribute the light -- it's just like art, really," Shuker said.

It was a novel experience for the 52-year-old retired navy analyst, who described himself as unfamiliar with Riyadh's art museums and galleries.

"I want to be honest with you: I don't go there," he said.

"We don't have time -- Riyadh now, it's very crowded, you cannot move easily. It's rush hour anywhere, at any time. So we have to find time for ourselves."

- Avoiding politics -

More than 130 artists from 40 countries participated in Noor Riyadh, which runs until November 19.

As with other exhibitions in the kingdom, the festival raises questions about "artwashing", or using the arts to launder the image of a country notorious for silencing dissidents, most notably slain journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

In recent months, Saudi Arabia has come under fire for decades-long prison terms handed down to two women who tweeted and retweeted posts critical of the government.

The negative headlines resulting from such cases undermine a central goal of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman's Vision 2030 reform agenda: to soften the kingdom's harsh image.

The Noor Riyadh installations generally steer clear of political messaging, though several highlight the ravages of climate change.

The festival's co-curator Herve Mikaeloff, who worked with international artists, allowed that some of them may have been apprehensive about coming to Saudi Arabia but said none received pressure from local authorities about content.

"For sure, if you accept work here, you have to accept the rules and you have to accept the juridical and political situation of it," Mikaeloff told AFP.

"I think most of the artists that I was talking with wanted to underline that a festival like this (is) also a political gesture, to open the country to the world."

C.Zeman--TPP