Hail museums: Treasure troves of history and heritage

Hail museums: Treasure troves of history and heritage
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The museums of Hail highlight historical ways of life, traditional craftsmanship and an array of archaeological artifacts. (SPA)
Hail museums: Treasure troves of history and heritage
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The museums of Hail highlight historical ways of life, traditional craftsmanship and an array of archaeological artifacts. (SPA)
Hail museums: Treasure troves of history and heritage
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The museums of Hail highlight historical ways of life, traditional craftsmanship and an array of archaeological artifacts. (SPA)
Hail museums: Treasure troves of history and heritage
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The museums of Hail highlight historical ways of life, traditional craftsmanship and an array of archaeological artifacts. (SPA)
Hail museums: Treasure troves of history and heritage
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The museums of Hail highlight historical ways of life, traditional craftsmanship and an array of archaeological artifacts. (SPA)
Hail museums: Treasure troves of history and heritage
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The museums of Hail highlight historical ways of life, traditional craftsmanship and an array of archaeological artifacts. (SPA)
Hail museums: Treasure troves of history and heritage
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The museums of Hail highlight historical ways of life, traditional craftsmanship and an array of archaeological artifacts. (SPA)
Hail museums: Treasure troves of history and heritage
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The museums of Hail highlight historical ways of life, traditional craftsmanship and an array of archaeological artifacts. (SPA)
Hail museums: Treasure troves of history and heritage
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The museums of Hail highlight historical ways of life, traditional craftsmanship and an array of archaeological artifacts. (SPA)
Hail museums: Treasure troves of history and heritage
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The museums of Hail highlight historical ways of life, traditional craftsmanship and an array of archaeological artifacts. (SPA)
Hail museums: Treasure troves of history and heritage
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The museums of Hail highlight historical ways of life, traditional craftsmanship and an array of archaeological artifacts. (SPA)
Hail museums: Treasure troves of history and heritage
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The museums of Hail highlight historical ways of life, traditional craftsmanship and an array of archaeological artifacts. (SPA)
Hail museums: Treasure troves of history and heritage
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The museums of Hail highlight historical ways of life, traditional craftsmanship and an array of archaeological artifacts. (SPA)
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Updated 23 January 2025

Hail museums: Treasure troves of history and heritage

Hail museums: Treasure troves of history and heritage
  • Samia Suleiman Al-Jabri: Museums play a vital role in preserving heritage, protecting it from extinction, and connecting generations to their civilizational and cultural legacy
  • Al-Jabri: They (museums) provide an information-rich environment that enhances historical and scientific knowledge for both international visitors and tourists

Hail’s museums offer visitors a journey through time, bringing to life the ancient stories of the region’s ancestors.

A number of museums in the city highlight historical ways of life, traditional craftsmanship and an array of archaeological artifacts.

“Museums play a vital role in preserving heritage, protecting it from extinction, and connecting generations to their civilizational and cultural legacy,” Samia Suleiman Al-Jabri, associate professor of modern history at Hail University, told the Saudi Press Agency.

“They provide an information-rich environment that enhances historical and scientific knowledge for both international visitors and tourists, including students, researchers and cultural enthusiasts.

“Moreover, museums are key tourist destinations that promote cultural tourism, offering visitors access to diverse collections of rare heritage artifacts, which in turn significantly boosts the local economy.”

Al-Jabri said that ’s leadership was committed to enhancing the role of museums nationally, which strengthened national identity by showcasing the Kingdom’s cultural heritage.

The Authenticity Museum is one of the most prominent cultural, heritage and tourist landmarks in Hail.

It features a diverse collection of artifacts and tools that provide insight into the past.

The museum also highlights traditional furniture, from historical majlis (sitting rooms), heritage seating, and intricately hand-crafted cabinets once used in traditional homes.

Ali Bakhrisa, owner of the “Asalah” Museum, said: “Among the most notable items on display are ancient heritage tools, including pottery, cooking implements and hunting gear.

“The museum also showcases a collection of traditional clothing worn by the region’s tribes, featuring men’s garments such as the sadiriyya, dagla, kut and bisht, alongside women’s attire, which is hand-embroidered and woven, including the dagla, sabah, burqas and dara’a once worn by Hail’s women.

“In addition, the museum proudly exhibits a selection of classic cars from various manufacturers.”

The museum, which Bakhrisa said took 20 years to curate through extensive research trips across the Kingdom and beyond, boasts a rich collection of traditional weapons, including swords, daggers and antique rifles.

It also features an exquisite array of traditional jewelry and ornaments, historically worn by women on social occasions and renowned for their authentic heritage designs.

The museum also highlights traditional architecture once common in the region, showcasing distinctive architectural styles and locally sourced building materials.

One of the most renowned museums in Hail is the Found Influence from the Past Museum, housed in a clay structure more than a century old.

Its owner, Khaled Al-Matroud, has carefully transformed this historic home into a museum that showcases a remarkable collection of more than 2,000 artifacts, elegantly arranged across its wings and corridors.

A standout feature is the heritage majlis, known for its soaring ceilings — reaching up to eight meters — and its impressive 15-meter width, reflecting the region’s architectural style.

This majlis was ingeniously designed to adapt to seasonal needs, with distinct shapes for summer and winter.

The museum also preserves the charm of a traditional Hail house, featuring numerous rooms and an open courtyard that facilitates natural ventilation, further enhanced by the lush greenery of palm, orange and lemon trees at its entrance.

Fadi Al-Abdullah, a passionate admirer of historical artifacts, praised these museums for preserving and documenting the intricate details of a past era.

Antar Al-Kilani, an Egyptian resident, views these museums as a gateway to discovering the cultural and historical heritage of the region.


‘Niyū Yūrk’ exhibition explores MENA influence on the Big Apple 

‘Niyū Yūrk’ exhibition explores MENA influence on the Big Apple 
Updated 09 October 2025

‘Niyū Yūrk’ exhibition explores MENA influence on the Big Apple 

‘Niyū Yūrk’ exhibition explores MENA influence on the Big Apple 
  • Inside the first show dedicated to NYC’s Public Library’s Middle Eastern collections   

RIYADH: Outside The New York Public Library’s Stephen A. Schwarzman Building, the unmistakable scent of a halal food cart mingles with the sounds of various Arabic dialects, while two marble lions stand guard over Fifth Avenue. Inside, entire worlds are waiting to be discovered — including the often-overlooked stories of New York’s Middle Eastern and North African communities. 

“Niyū Yūrk: Middle Eastern and North African Lives in the City,” the first exhibition dedicated to the Library’s Middle Eastern collections, opened Oct. 4. It will remain on view in the Ispahani-Bartos Gallery until March 8. 

Berenice Abbott’s photograph from the 1930s of Syrian-owned The Lebanon Restaurant and an Arabic record store next door on Washington Street in New York. (Courtesy of The New York Public Library)

Curated by Hiba Abid, the exhibition contains around 60 objects — photos, books, periodicals and audio — dating from the 1850s to 2024. It centers specifically on the library’s own holdings, rather than attempting to tell a comprehensive history of MENA life in New York, Abid tells Arab News. 

Drawing from over a century of rare materials the exhibition uses tangible objects to express the intangible: memory, identity and immigrant culture.  

“It’s not a love letter. It’s a realistic letter,” Abid says, adding that these communities have long navigated complex questions of belonging, language, and preservation.  

Curator Hiba Abid. (Supplied)

“The communities, from the very beginning, were wondering, ‘Where should our kids go to school? If they go to the public New York schools, they would probably lose their language, but we want them to still know Arabic and be aware of our traditions and values,’” she said. 

The exhibition is divided into four chronological sections, designed to help guide visitors of all ages, from young children to seasoned scholars. 

The first section, “Roads to New York,” focuses on the earliest waves of immigration. One of the first featured figures is Hatchik Oscanyan — later known as Christopher Oscanyan — an Armenian man born in what is now Türkiye. He came to New York in the mid-19th century and sought to educate Americans about the complexity of the Ottoman Empire. He wrote plays and newspaper articles, as well as “The Sultan and His People,” a book that offers insight into the region’s diverse ethnic and religious makeup.  

The second section, “A Life in the City,” explores how immigrant communities began to form and thrive in New York, including in what was once known as Little Syria on Manhattan’s Lower West Side — an area that still exists today. They were entrepreneurs who opened restaurants, shops, and began publishing Arabic newspapers.

Richard Kasbaum’s photograph of Moroccan impresario Hassan Ben Ali, who toured the States with a troupe of acrobats, dancers, musicians and actors. (Courtesy of The New York Public Library)

One of the most groundbreaking was Al-Hoda, founded by Naoum Antoun Mokarzel and his brother Salloum. “In the basement of Al-Hoda Press, they adapted the linotype machine from Latin characters to Arabic characters, which is very hard (because Arabic is) a cursive language,” Abid says. “By this technological innovation, he actually allowed other presses to form and to publish newspapers, periodicals, and books,” which then circulated throughout North and Latin America — and back to the Middle East. 

In other words, New York was instrumental in literally building the Arabic press and exporting news to the Middle East.  

Abid emphasizes how vital the library’s historical collections are to telling these stories.  

“The library has been collecting these materials since the late 19th century,” she says, adding that many of them have been digitized, enabling audiences to interact with them in a new way. 

The third section, “Impressions,” flips the gaze, revealing how Middle Eastern immigrants perceived New York and the US.  

“Many immigrant groups embraced American values… but many (Arabs) actually didn’t like New York and didn’t like American values and left after a few years here or after a few months.” The exhibit highlights these ambivalences and the tensions of assimilation. 

The final section, “In Our Own Skin,” is the most contemporary and, for Abid, the most personal. It includes raw, vulnerable stories that reflect racial identity, Islamophobia, and resistance. Among the most powerful pieces is the short documentary “In My Own Skin,” directed by Jennifer Jajeh and Nikki Byrd, which features interviews with five Arab women in New York, and was filmed just one month after the events of Sept. 11, 2001.  

“The interviews are absolutely amazing. Every time I talk about it, I have goosebumps,” Abid says. “The way they talk about it — it is still very relevant today, as if nothing changed much, except that we’re probably more powerful because we are aware of this and we know how to organize and to fight back. We have the vocabulary now, and the community.” 

That spirit of organization is embodied by Malikah, a grassroots collective founded by Rana Abdelhamid in 2010 as a self-defense class for Muslim women on Steinway Street in Queens. The movement has since expanded into a larger project of empowerment, healing, and solidarity — and is featured in the exhibit’s final section. The powerful sound of the athan, or call to prayer, has been important to this cultural shift. 

While images of the Statue of Liberty — based on an Egyptian woman — didn’t make the cut, but Abid stresses its significance on each guided tour. On this occasion, though, she wanted to focus the visitors on lesser-known gems. 

Having lived in New York for the past four years as a Tunisian immigrant who spent much of her life in France, Abid says she finds New York to be more diverse than anywhere else she has ever lived.  

“I live on Atlantic Avenue in the Syrian corner. The things I witnessed here and in Middle Eastern parts of New York, like Astoria, I could never see anywhere else — even Paris,” she says. “When you go to the exhibition, you actually think, ‘Damn! We actually did a lot. And we’re here, you know—we’re here. 

“It shows how New York was central to all of these struggles and how New York — thanks to its MENA community — was actually connected and aware. It puts New York on a global map, you know? I think New York is incredible terrain for this. It’s the space for it. That’s what this show is about, ultimately.”  


Diriyah Contemporary Art Biennale announces theme, artists for 2026 edition 

Diriyah Contemporary Art Biennale announces theme, artists for 2026 edition 
Updated 08 October 2025

Diriyah Contemporary Art Biennale announces theme, artists for 2026 edition 

Diriyah Contemporary Art Biennale announces theme, artists for 2026 edition 
  • Artistic directors Nora Razian and Sabih Ahmed discuss ‘In Interludes and Transitions’ 

RIYADH: The 2026 edition of the Diriyah Contemporary Art Biennale — “In Interludes and Transitions,” which opens Jan. 30 — will bring together more than 70 artists, and include more than 20 new commissions at JAX, Diriyah’s creative district. 

The title comes from a colloquial Arabic phrase that refers to the cycles of encampments and journeys in nomadic communities across the Arabian Peninsula, reflecting the movements, migrations, and transformations that continue to connect the Gulf region with the world. 

Diriyah Contemporary Art Biennale Artistic Director Nora Razian. (Courtesy of the Diriyah Biennale Foundation)

“There’s also this very contemporary conversation we’re presenting to complement that sentiment,” artistic director Nora Razian tells Arab News. “I think COVID changed the way people work, but I also think the whole ‘everything going digital and online’ has kind of faded away now and people are already craving the intimate conviviality of sharing an experience together. 

“Of course, if you are Saudi you kind of know Diriyah, but it was always a little bit outside of the city. Now it’s very much integrated into the city, and the way that people think about the city. It’s become its own kind of place,” she continues. 

The biennale will explore movement, processions, and cultural transmission. Sound-based works will be presented along with visual art, music, and performance, offering audiences a full-bodied, cross-disciplinary experience, according to the organizers. 

Artistic Director Sabih Ahmed. (Courtesy of the Diriyah Biennale Foundation)

While acknowledging that “some people may have been a little fatigued (by the number of biennales in the region, including the Islamic Arts Biennale in Jeddah, also run by the Diriyah Biennale Foundation),” Razian’s fellow artistic director, Sabih Ahmed, tells Arab News that this edition feels “a little bit like an edited anthology of many voices that come through together.”  

Both artistic directors were drawn to the idea of processions as a curatorial thread. In a joint statement, they wrote: “Processions have produced relations and forms in this region. The movement of winds and the flow of trade, migration, and exile are carriers of stories, songs, and languages, producing rhythms and poetic meters such as the rajaz. Thinking of the world in procession — a braiding of movements that commemorate and celebrate — allows an understanding of cultural forms through exchange and transmissions; itineraries of travel, intersections, and mutations; and the retelling of fragments of exiled stories that have persisted through bodies, materials, rhythms, and cadences.” 

Saudi artist Ahaad Alamoudi. (Photo by Zaynab Odunsi)

The biennale will unfold across multiple venues and outdoor spaces in Diriyah, with scenography by design studio Formafantasma and contributions from a team of international curators including Maan Abu Taleb, May Makki, Kabelo Malatsie, and Lantian Xie. Milan-based architect Sammy Zarka joins as associate architect and exhibition designer. 

The preliminary list of participating artists features Saudi artist Ahaad Alamoudi alongside international figures including Pio Abad, Rand Abdul Jabbar, Yussef Agbo-Ola (Olaniyi Studio), Afra Al Dhaheri, Mohammed Alhamdan (7amdan), Ruba Al-Sweel, Taysir Batniji, Raven Chacon, Rohini Devasher, Merve Ertufan, Ivana Franke, Rahima Gambo, Petrit Halilaj, Aziz Hazara, Alana Hunt, Yazan Khalili, George Mahashe, Théo Mercier, Nour Mobarak, Nancy Mounir, Hussein Nassereddine, Daniel Otero Torres, Thảo Nguyên Phan, Gala Porras-Kim, Sarker Protick, Raqs Media Collective, Oscar Santillán, Trương Công Tùng, Wolff Architects, Agustina Woodgate, and Yu Ji. 

By blending visual art, music, and poetry — a hallmark of cultural expression across the Arab world — the biennale is intended to amplify continuity and resilience in times of uncertainty. Through song, stories, dance and collaborative processes, it highlights how art preserves memory, asserts the power of the collective, and sparks hope. 

The Diriyah Biennale Foundation, chaired by Prince Badr bin Abdullah bin Farhan Al-Saud, continues to champion creativity and the transformative potential of culture. With the upcoming edition of the Contemporary Art Biennale, the foundation hopes that Diriyah can solidify its place as a generator of culture.  


Review: AMSY Lab — creative space in Diriyah

Review: AMSY Lab — creative space in Diriyah
Updated 03 October 2025

Review: AMSY Lab — creative space in Diriyah

Review: AMSY Lab — creative space in Diriyah
  • AMSY Lab uses a robotic sculpting technique on wood and stone, which visitors will find unique

AMSY Lab is a creative space located in the heart of the lively and vibrant district of JAX in Diriyah. Owned by architect Abdulaziz Abbas and opened eight months ago, the lab serves as a space for artists to express their appreciation for handicrafts as well as engage in various forms of weekly workshops, especially workshops on carving wood.

Despite being established for less than a year, the lab has been developed under the umbrella of AMSY Construction and Innovation Co. and is collaborating with Dahma Coffee, providing a mixture of art experiences while enjoying a cup of coffee for both customers and visitors.

Visitors will be fascinated by the interior. It is by far one of the best coffee and creative places in Riyadh. It combines visual art with coffee and can easily satisfy the senses with the smell of roasted coffee beans and the beautiful carving on the wooden wall.

Another exciting aspect of this place is also the utilization of modern technology in Art. AMSY Lab uses a robotic sculpting technique on wood and stone, which visitors will find unique.

They also organize art galleries and host workshops every weekend for all types of arts, and invite art lovers and artists to get involved in creating artwork, such as when they organized carving on wooden coffee tables and phone holders in the past, along with decoupage on cup coasters and clay workshops.

However, the coffee options are limited to almost the basic hot drinks. Dahma coffee serves only hot beverages with only three types of dessert. It would be much better if they also included cold drinks in their menu for visitors who might prefer iced coffee over hot coffee.

Another point that might be a disadvantage is the cost of workshops. Workshops cost from SR200 ($53.33) to SR300, which some will believe is a bit expensive. 

 


Bad Bunny celebrates Palestinian listeners embracing his music 

Bad Bunny celebrates Palestinian listeners embracing his music 
Updated 03 October 2025

Bad Bunny celebrates Palestinian listeners embracing his music 

Bad Bunny celebrates Palestinian listeners embracing his music 

DUBAI: Puerto Rican star Bad Bunny this week spoke about the global reach of his songs, highlighting how deeply moved he feels by listeners in Palestine embracing his work.

Speaking in an interview with Billboard Arabia, the Grammy-winning artist reflected on the response to his track “DtMF.”

“It’s really beautiful to see so many people from Latin America connecting with that song, people from Palestine connecting with that song, people from all over the world connecting with that song,” he said.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

He explained that the impact extended to his other personal works. “And not only with that one but also with ‘DeVita’ and ‘Dalma Fotos,’ songs where I mention San Juan, songs where I mention places only from here, from Puerto Rico, where I mention my grandfather … Personal songs that people identify with,” he added.

Bad Bunny reflected on what this connection means for him as an artist. “That’s where you see that music is about that, and art in general is about being real, about being honest, and about people being able to identify with what you feel, because through those songs they see that there is no difference between them and me.”

الحمدلله FOR A CEASEFIRE!!! Inshallah I can go again

“DtMF” — short for “Debi Tirar Mas Fotos” (“I should’ve taken more photos”) — went viral in Palestine, with people sharing before-and-after pictures of destruction from the war with Israel.

In the song, Bad Bunny looks back on moments he wishes he had captured, weaving in references to Puerto Rico, his grandfather and local musical styles such as bomba and plena. 

While he dwells on regret, he also emphasizes the importance of cherishing what remains, valuing connections, and honoring one’s roots and memories.


Inside Ithra’s ‘Horizon in Their Hands’ exhibition  

Inside Ithra’s ‘Horizon in Their Hands’ exhibition  
Updated 05 October 2025

Inside Ithra’s ‘Horizon in Their Hands’ exhibition  

Inside Ithra’s ‘Horizon in Their Hands’ exhibition  
  • Overlooked stories of pioneering Arab women come to light in new show 

DHAHRAN: There’s a new exhibition in town. Some of the artists you know, and some you don’t — which is exactly the point. 

The works of more than four dozen pioneering women from across the Arab world are on display — some for the first time ever — in “Horizon in Their Hands: Women Artists from the Arab World (’60s–’80s),” which opened Sept. 18 at the King Abdulaziz Center for World Culture (Ithra) in Dhahran and runs until Feb. 14. The show contains 70 works by artists from 13 countries. 

Fatima Hassan Assiri, ‘Untitled.’ (Courtesy of Jameelah Assiri)

“The idea behind the title was to give back agency to a generation of women who have been overlooked,” the show’s curator, Rémi Homs, tells Arab News. “We also wanted to see this relationship between arts and craft as a horizon for further research. And we wanted to have this idea of hands — something handmade.” 

The exhibition is a collaboration between Ithra and Barjeel, a UAE-based foundation established by Sultan Sooud Al-Qassemi in 2010. Of the 50 artists featured, four are from : Mona Al-Munajjed, Fatima Hassan Assiri, Mounirah Mosly, and Safeya Binzagr, regarded as the mother of Saudi modern art. Both Al-Munajjed and Binzagr are the subjects of an “In Focus” section of the show, along with the late Tunisian artist Safia Farhat, and the Wissa Wassef Art Center in Egypt, which preserves hand-weaving traditions. 

 Mona Al-Munajjed, ‘Dreams Come True in Saudi,’ 2022 - Batik on silk. (Courtesy of the artist)

Al-Munajjed’s works, including “Traditional Saudi Door” and “Minaret of Mosque” — both from the mid-Eighties — weave together personal memory and collective history, capturing intimate domestic scenes and broader social narratives of Jeddah. Using the fiery batik dyeing technique, she blends vibrant colors and subtle textures, creating visual stories that feel both deeply personal and historically resonant. 

Assiri, the mother of renowned artists Ahmed and Jamila Mater, showcases an untitled acrylic-on-wood panel piece — a complex composition that intertwines colors and motifs, employing the feminist-centric traditional Saudi art form, Al-Qatt Al-Asiri — which women historically used to decorate their homes with specific shapes, colors, and markings, and is listed on UNESCO’s Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity. 

Nadia Mohamed, ‘Palms and Fields,’ 2021 - Tapestry. (Courtesy of Barjeel Art Foundation Collection, Sharjah)

“The Young Woman,” by Mosly, exemplifies the late artist’s ability to blend portraiture with broader social and cultural themes, while Binzagr’s lithography etchings, intimate and bold, captured the spirit of Saudi life, blending figurative storytelling with a modernist sensibility that continues to resonate. Her 1980 work “Desert Ship,” depicting camels in front of a tent, is particularly striking. 

The show is split into thematic sections, including “Depicting a Rapid Modernization,” “Alternative Pathways: Self-Taught Artists,” “Revisiting Islamic Art Legacies,” “New Media Experimentation,” “Reclaiming Local Craft Practices,” and “Al-Qatt Al-Asiri.” 

Many of the works carry partial or unknown histories. Homs cites a brass piece by Egyptian artist Atyat El-Ahwal (1989), initially listed only by name and date.  

“We basically had no information about her,” he says. “We included her work because we wanted to focus not just on the more well-known names,” he said. Further research — and input from visitors and experts — helped uncover her full name, dates of birth and death (1919–2012), and even a video likely recorded in the 1970s found on YouTube, all allowing her work to be contextualized in a broader history.  

Everyday materials appear in surprising ways — transformed into abstract compositions, for example — and embroidery is reimagined as narrative painting. Henna recurs across many works; Homs highlighted Emirati pioneer Najat Makki, saying: “Henna was an accessible part of everyday life.”  

He praises the artists’ innovative and creative use of available materials. “Something that you cannot see in history books from the West, but it’s something very important and, in my opinion, very groundbreaking,” he says. 

And Homs is hopeful that the exhibition will lead to further revelations of artworks by women in the Arab world. 

“Yes, we are seeing 70 different works by 50 different artists—22 of whom are still alive,” he says. “But it’s the tip of the iceberg. I’d say that we are seeing maybe the first 5 percent of artists we need to discover.”