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Lebanese artist Lana Khayat discusses her first solo show in șÚÁÏÉçÇű

  Lebanese artist Lana Khayat discusses her first solo show in șÚÁÏÉçÇű
Lana Khayat. (Supplied)
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Updated 28 February 2025

Lebanese artist Lana Khayat discusses her first solo show in șÚÁÏÉçÇű

  Lebanese artist Lana Khayat discusses her first solo show in șÚÁÏÉçÇű
  • ‘I would like show how Arab heritage is evolving,’ says Lana Khayat

DUBAI: Lebanese artist Lana Khayat is currently staging her first solo show in șÚÁÏÉçÇű. “The White Lilies of Marrakech: Women as Timeless Narratives” runs at Riyadh’s Hafez Gallery until March 25, and is, according to the press release, an homage to the titular city’s Jardin Majorelle, which celebrates its centenary this year, “as well as Lana’s enduring narrative on the strength and resilience of women.” 

Khayat says the exhibition also marks a significant step forward in her work, which blends influences from nature with abstraction and calligraphy.  

“In this show, you will see a bolder look, a more confident me,” she tells Arab News. “Nature was always my main inspiration, but recently I’ve added another layer of botanical forms into my work, which will be seen for the first time in this show. An obvious example is the lily. The lily is an intrinsic part of my work; it was always present. But now it is taking center stage, so it becomes more apparent. The lily, which is the symbol of women
 in my earlier works, it was very shy, but in my most recent work, you can see the lily taking the foreground — big and lush, and very present. I’m very shy. I’m a big introvert, but I’ve learned that, actually, the truer I am to my work, the more people relate to it. I think women are very strong, and their strength is very silent, but at the same time very commanding — and I definitely feel more confident in my work. 




'Echoes of Ephemeral Whispers.' (Supplied)

“I even changed my signature,” she continues. “It has become more bold.” 

The inspiration for the exhibition, as the name suggests, came when Khayat was visiting Marrakech.  

“Marrakesh is a historical cultural crossroads; it embodies the fusion of tradition and modernity, which is essential to my work,” she says. “Its Berber and Arab and Andalusian influences make it the perfect backdrop to my work. And the theme of the show was born of out of my fascination with how women’s stories persist throughout time — through language, through culture, through nature. The lilies, for me, are women, standing strong. They’re there. They flourish. Lilies are among the strongest plants and flowers, and water lilies are present in the Jardin Majorelle. So it’s this interplay of my study of women, my study of lilies, and my study of languages, and I felt that Marrakesh is the perfect place to carry all of these meanings.” 




'The Vermilion Lilies of Marrakech.' (Supplied)

Given her ancestry, it’s no surprise that Khayat became an artist. Her great grandfather, Mohamad Suleiman Khayat, was a famed restorer of lavish Syrian-style Ajami rooms whose work is in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, among other prestigious establishments. His son and grandson — Khayat’s father — followed in his footsteps.  

“I was raised with this,” says Khayat. “From them, I learned patience. But it was male-dominated, so I had to forge a place for myself in this artistic lineage, which wasn’t easy, but I slowly found my voice.” 

A large part of discovering that voice was moving to New York from Lebanon after completing her degree in design. “I remember in my childhood I was copying Van Gogh, you know? Vases and flowers
 I had images of that in my head,” she says. “But after I was in New York, and I spent some time working at the Guggenheim, and then when I moved to Dubai, that’s when I actually had a bit of an internal struggle. ‘Should I keep (my art) to myself, or should I just show it and see where it will take me?’ And after some internal conflicts between me and myself, I thought, ‘There’s actually nothing to lose. Let’s just see where it takes me.’ And around 10 years ago, I was lucky to meet Qaswra (Hafez), the founder of Hafez gallery, who really believed in my work and supported it.” 




'Between Bloom and Form.' (Supplied)

She loves Monet’s work, she says, but her main inspirations were other female artists — though not necessarily because of their art. 

“It was more the artist’s journey and how they fought for that rather than the art itself,” she says. “For example, I love Frida Kahlo for her boldness.” A few days after our interview, she writes to add that Lebanese artist Etel Adnan’s work is also an inspiration, because “her fearless blending of disciplines — of poetry, landscape, and abstraction — encourages my own pursuit of art that honors resilience, transformation, and the enduring strength of women.” 

In her twenties, Khayat was more influenced by Western art, “but now I appreciate Arab art more and more,” she says. “My work has multiple layers. It’s both personal and universal. It’s a celebration of my Arab heritage. Also, I use language in a very meditative way — the script I use, it’s a carrier of tradition and a testament to history. My work is also very abstract. The script I use dissolves into gestures and the nature that I’m inspired by morphs into fluid shapes. You know, Arab culture is vast and diverse, but in my work, I try to reinterpret it and show how it evolves; it’s not stagnant.” 

Calligraphy is, she says, “a quiet dialogue between me and the painting, between the audience and the painting, and it’s open to interpretation. I would love for the viewer just to lose themselves in the painting and find the meaning where they want. And it’s a dialog also with history, because, as I said, I would like to reinterpret Arab heritage and show how it’s evolving.” 

That last point is one of the things she most hopes audiences will take away from the Riyadh show. “I hope it feels intimate and universal for them, and I hope they see it as a celebration of script. I hope they see the abstraction I make in my work as an evolution of Arab heritage and I hope they see how, for me, nature is a witness to history,” she says. “And I hope they enjoy it.” 


From Cannes to Casino du Liban, flutist Daniel Alhaiby returns to Lebanon

From Cannes to Casino du Liban, flutist Daniel Alhaiby returns to Lebanon
Updated 37 sec ago

From Cannes to Casino du Liban, flutist Daniel Alhaiby returns to Lebanon

From Cannes to Casino du Liban, flutist Daniel Alhaiby returns to Lebanon

DUBAI: Flute in hand and a deep connection to both East and West, Daniel Alhaiby is preparing for his first solo concert at Lebanon’s Casino du Liban on Sept. 10.

The performance follows his years of experience playing at prestigious venues and events, including the Cannes Film Festival, where he shared his music with international audiences.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

“Cannes is pure magic. Each time I play, I feel like I’m representing not just myself, but a whole culture, a whole story,” Alhaiby told Arab News.

Returning to Lebanon for his solo concert is a deeply personal moment for Alhaiby.

“Performing in Lebanon is like coming full circle for me. It’s where everything started, and it holds so much significance,” he said.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

“Sharing my music in my home country feels like a celebration of my journey, from Paris to the world stage and back home again.

“Casino du Liban has always been a dream venue for me 
 The audience can expect a truly special experience. I’ve carefully crafted the setlist to take them on a musical journey that blends my original compositions with reimagined classics.”

Alhaiby’s musical influences are diverse, ranging from Piazzolla and Rimsky-Korsakov to Fairuz, Hans Zimmer, Pink Floyd and Bach.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

“I’m influenced by emotion more than genre. Anything that moves me, be it a Bach partita or an oriental improvisation, finds its way into my music,” he said.

The musician shared that he was drawn to the flute from a “very young age,” saying: “Its sound always felt close to my soul, there’s something about its breathy, expressive tone that connected deeply with my emotions. Over time, it became more than just an instrument; it became my voice, my way of expressing everything words couldn’t.”


Yara Shahidi stars in new Jean Paul Gaultier campaign

Yara Shahidi stars in new Jean Paul Gaultier campaign
Updated 24 August 2025

Yara Shahidi stars in new Jean Paul Gaultier campaign

Yara Shahidi stars in new Jean Paul Gaultier campaign

DUBAI: Part-Middle Eastern actress Yara Shahidi is the face of Jean Paul Gaultier’s latest “Divine” campaign for the luxury brand’s new elixir.

 The French brand released its Divine eau de parfum as an elixir — a type of concentrated perfume — this week, with Shahidi starring in the campaign alongside model Raphael Diogo.

Crafted by perfumer Quentin Bisch, the scent has floral and marine notes and was first released as an eau de parfum in 2023.

The fragrance is vegan, cruelty free and made with 90 percent “natural origin ingredients responsibly sourced,” according to the label.  

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

In a new set of images and clips shared on social media, Shahidi can be seen posing in a gold-hued sequinned gown while clutching the new product. The actress also showed off a velvet black top edged with gold baubles in another image.

In the original 2023 campaign, Shahidi appeared alongside Spanish actress Lola Rodriquez, South African catwalk star Thando Hopa, US actress and model Tess McMillan, Lagos-born model Janet Jumbo and Brazilian runway model Ana Elisa de Brito.  

The “Grown-ish” star was also included in the casting decisions and creative aspects of the launch, which aimed to celebrate women. 

“Actress, model, activist, social justice advocate and feminist, she was one of Time Magazines’ Most Influential Teens of 2016. Harvard graduate and creator of Eighteen x 18, a platform to encourage young US people to vote, Yara Shahidi has many different faces,” the brand wrote in a statement at the time.

The collaboration came after Shahidi was spotted wearing a custom-made, bronzed look by Jean Paul Gaultier at the 2023 Met Gala.

 Shahidi is also a global ambassador for the Dior’s fashion and beauty lines and was named among National Geographic’s list of 33 “visionaries, creators, icons, and adventurers” from across the globe earlier this year.

Part-Middle Eastern star Shahidi, whose father is Iranian, was named on the list in the “Creators” subsection that celebrates “out-of-the-box thinkers developing innovative solutions.”

The “Black-ish” and “Grown-ish” actress was highlighted due to her podcast “The Optimist Project.”

Shahidi, 25, launched the podcast to explore how to live a more fulfilling life with various special guests hosted on each episode.

Shahidi, a Harvard graduate, says she was inspired by the dynamic conversations she has with members of her diverse family. 

 


Filmmakers urge Venice Film Festival to take stand on Gaza

Filmmakers urge Venice Film Festival to take stand on Gaza
Updated 24 August 2025

Filmmakers urge Venice Film Festival to take stand on Gaza

Filmmakers urge Venice Film Festival to take stand on Gaza

DUBAI: Hundreds of filmmakers and cultural figures have rallied behind an open letter demanding the Venice Film Festival break its silence on Gaza, calling on it to take a “clear and unambiguous stand” against what they denounce as genocide and ethnic cleansing.

The appeal, organized under the banner of Venice4Palestine, was sent to the Venice film festival umbrella organization, the Biennale di Venezia, on Friday.

In the letter, the group accuses the Israeli government and military of carrying out genocide in Gaza and ethnic cleansing across Palestine. It urges the festival to avoid becoming “a sad and empty showcase” by providing instead “a place of dialogue, active participation and resistance, as it has been in the past.”

Signatories include British filmmaker Ken Loach, Italian actor Toni Servillo (star of 2025 Venice opener, “La Grazia” from Paolo Sorrentino), Italian actress and director siblings Alba and Alice Rohrwacher, actress Jasmine Trinca, French directors Celine Sciamma and Audrey Diwan, British actor Charles Dance, and Palestinian directorial duo Arab Nasser and Tarzan Nasser, who won best director in Cannes Un Certain Regard this year for their latest film, “Once Upon A Time In Gaza.”

The letter references the deaths of nearly 250 Palestinian media workers since the start of the conflict and stresses that cultural institutions cannot remain detached.

“As the spotlight turns on the Venice Film Festival, we’re in danger of going through yet another major event that remains indifferent to this human, civil, and political tragedy,” it reads. “‘The show must go on,’ we are told, as we’re urged to look away — as if the ‘film world’ had nothing to do with the ‘real world.’

“For once, the show must stop. We must interrupt the flow of indifference and open a path to awareness.” It concludes: “There is no cinema without humanity.”

In response, the Biennale said the festival “has always been, throughout their history, places of open discussion and sensitivity to all the most pressing issues facing society and the world.”

It pointed to works in the lineup such as “The Voice of Hind Rajab,” Tunisian director Kaouther Ben Hania’s competition entry about the killing of a 5-year-old Palestinian girl in Gaza in 2024.


Bands pull out of UK festival following Palestinian flag controversy

Bands pull out of UK festival following Palestinian flag controversy
Updated 24 August 2025

Bands pull out of UK festival following Palestinian flag controversy

Bands pull out of UK festival following Palestinian flag controversy
  • Incident sparks wave of boycotts from other performers

LONDON: Several bands withdrew from a British festival on Saturday following claims that Irish folk group The Mary Wallopers had their set cut short for displaying a Palestinian flag.

The incident sparked a wave of boycotts from other performers in solidarity, it was reported on Sunday.

The Last Dinner Party, Cliffords, and The Academic announced that they would no longer perform at the annual Victorious Festival in Portsmouth, citing concerns over political censorship.

Rock band The Last Dinner Party described the incident as “outrageous” and said they could not condone silencing artists.

“As Gazans are deliberately plunged into catastrophic famine after two years of escalating violence, it is urgent and obvious that artists use their platform to draw attention to the cause,” the band said in a statement shared on Instagram.

They urged fans to support Palestinian medical charities and apologized to those hoping to see them perform.

The Mary Wallopers claimed the festival released a “misleading statement” by suggesting their set was cut due to a discriminatory chant, rather than the band’s call to “Free Palestine.”

They released video footage showing a crew member removing the flag from the stage before the sound was cut.

“The same crew member is later heard saying ‘You aren’t playing until the flag is removed’,” the band added.

The Academic said they could not “in good conscience” perform at a festival that silenced free speech, while Cliffords said they “refuse to play if we are to be censored for showing our support to the people of Palestine.”

Festival organizers initially said The Mary Wallopers’ microphones were turned off after displaying the flag, citing a long-standing policy against flags for safety and event management reasons.

They said: “We spoke to the artist before the performance regarding the festival’s long-standing policy of not allowing flags of any kind at the event, but (we said) that we respect their right to express their views during the show.”

They acknowledged, however, that the policy was not communicated sensitively and apologized for the way the situation was handled.

They added: “The Mary Wallopers are a fantastic band, and we were very much looking forward to their performance on Friday.

“We are in the business of putting on great shows, not cutting them off, and this is the last thing we wanted — for the band, their fans and ourselves.”

Organizers also pledged to make a “substantial donation” to humanitarian relief efforts for Palestinians.

The festival’s closing day on Sunday was set to feature Kings of Leon, with Bloc Party, Gabrielle, and The Reytons among the other acts scheduled to perform.


Annemarie Jacir’s ‘Palestine 36’ chosen as Oscar submission

Annemarie Jacir’s ‘Palestine 36’ chosen as Oscar submission
Updated 23 August 2025

Annemarie Jacir’s ‘Palestine 36’ chosen as Oscar submission

Annemarie Jacir’s ‘Palestine 36’ chosen as Oscar submission
  • Film received partial funding from șÚÁÏÉçÇű’s Red Sea Fund, Qatar-based Katara Studios

DUBAI: Palestinian filmmaker and writer Annemarie Jacir’s “Palestine 36” has been selected as Palestine’s official submission for the Oscars’ international feature film category.

Set in 1930s Palestine, the drama explores the lives of individuals during the uprising against British colonial rule. Against a backdrop of sweeping change, the film delves into themes of identity, resistance and transformation.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

The story follows Yusuf (Karim Daoud Anaya), a young man caught between his rural village and the rapidly changing city of Jerusalem; Afra (Wardi Eilabouni), a girl navigating an uncertain world with the guidance of her grandmother (Hiam Abbass); and a port worker (Saleh Bakri), who finds himself drawn into an emerging uprising. A British official, portrayed by Oscar-winner Jeremy Irons, attempts to maintain order as tensions rise.

The cast also features “Game of Thrones” star Liam Cunningham, Tunisian actor Dhafer L’Abidine, and Palestinian talents Yasmine Al-Massri and Kamel El-Basha.

“Palestine 36” was selected as Palestine’s Oscar entry by an independent committee of Palestinian film professionals in a move officially confirmed by the Palestinian Ministry of Culture.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

The film received partial funding from șÚÁÏÉçÇű’s Red Sea Fund, and Qatar-based Katara Studios. Watermelon Pictures has acquired distribution rights to the film.

Featuring rare archival footage of 1930s Palestine, “Palestine 36” is set to have its world premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival on Sept. 5, where it will become the first Arab film to screen in the festival’s prestigious Gala section.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Jacir, who has been working on “Palestine 36” since before the pandemic, is known for her focus on Palestinian narratives. Her previous films include “Salt of This Sea” (2008), “When I Saw You” (2012), and “Wajib” (2017), all of which received critical acclaim and represented Palestine at the Academy Awards. “Palestine 36” is her fourth film to be submitted by Palestine for Oscar consideration.

It is the 18th film to be submitted by Palestine since it began participating in the international feature category. To date, the country has received two nominations in the category, both for films directed by Hany Abu-Assad: “Paradise Now” in 2006 and “Omar” in 2014.

The Oscars’ international feature shortlist will be announced on Dec. 16, with final nominations revealed on Jan. 22.