Art Week Riyadh: A ‘constellation of events’ that ‘pushes the boundaries’

Art Week Riyadh: A ‘constellation of events’ that ‘pushes the boundaries’
The inaugural Art Week Riyadh begins April 6 in the Kingdom’s capital at JAX District. (Courtesy of Visual Arts Commission, ).
Short Url
Updated 03 April 2025

Art Week Riyadh: A ‘constellation of events’ that ‘pushes the boundaries’

Art Week Riyadh: A ‘constellation of events’ that ‘pushes the boundaries’
  • Curatorial team discuss the aims and intentions behind inaugural edition of AWR

RIYADH: The inaugural Art Week Riyadh begins April 6 in the Kingdom’s capital. A non-commercial initiative, AWR builds on the city’s already thriving art community while inviting international artists and art lovers to join in.

Princess Adwaa bint Yazeed bin Abdullah, head of Art Week Riyadh, explained the event’s inspirations and goals in a statement, writing: “Art Week Riyadh is born from a belief in the power of art to inspire, challenge, and connect us. Riyadh has long been a city of growth, and through this platform we hope to contribute to its cultural future — one that is open, dynamic and deeply rooted in both heritage and innovation.”

Curator Vittoria Mataresse heads a team including associate curators Basma Harasani and Victoria Gandit-Lelandais and public program curator Shumon Basar who have worked tirelessly across multiple time zones over several months to bring the event to life.

“It was very important for us to be playful and not have the kind of rigid structure or format we’re used to seeing. Art Week Riyadh sits in between an exhibition and an art fair. It’s really a constellation of events,” Matarrese tells Arab News. “Unlike major art events that often impose universal themes and rely on globally established artists, we wanted to work within the frame of a regional art ecosystem, embracing the textures, the urgencies, the sensibilities of the Arabian Peninsula. We are trying to retrace something which is very specific and, in this way, we propose a critical departure (from the normal) format.”




Curator Vittoria Mataresse (pictured) heads a team including associate curators Basma Harasani and Victoria Gandit-Lelandais and public program curator Shumon Basar who have worked tirelessly across multiple time zones over several months to bring the event to life. (Supplied)

The theme of AWR’s inaugural edition is “At the Edge” and the event brings together more than 45 galleries from the Kingdom, the wider Arab world, and beyond. There are three main sub-themes: “Everyday Life,” “Landscapes,” and “Motifs.”

JAX District in Diriyah will host three major exhibitions offering an expansive insight into ’s cultural identity. A number of established Saudi artists whose studios are based in JAX will also be opening their doors to the public. Meanwhile, in central Riyadh, more than 15 galleries housed in the Al-Mousa Center will present exhibitions, and a wider program across the city will feature several talks and collaborations.

Gandit-Lelandais, who has worked in the region for more than two decades focusing on contemporary Arab art, tells Arab News: “Art Week Riyadh really is different, because the market and the ecosystem is different. I think it’s about making people stop implementing the European and American formats into different places because they don’t have to fit — the format can be adapted.”

The team have designed the event as “an umbrella for everyone to gather under,” Gandit-Lelandais says. “It is inclusive and it’s meant to be niche — it is for the public, and for the art enthusiasts and for the collectors.

“With Riyadh growing so fast, the kind of dialogues that we have built are so important to bring people here, but not with a Western look at how art should be,” she adds.

Harasani, the lone Saudi in the curatorial team, tells Arab News: “I’m really excited to link our local artists and our local scene (with the world). I think an educational foundation is super-exciting and super-necessary at this time for artists, art practitioners, young collectors and everyone that comes under that umbrella. We wanted to allow these generations of artists from to narrate themselves, beyond the usual framework.”




Lamya Gargash, Lions, The Architect, Bath, UK, 2024, Archival pigment print, 90 x 120 cm, Edition of 3, 1AP. (Courtesy of the artist and The Third Line, Dubai)

While none of the curators live in Riyadh, they all offer a nuanced and sensitive take on the capital. 

“I’ve been working in Riyadh so much that it does feel like a second home,” Harasani says. “Riyadh is culturally different from Jeddah, where I’m from, and it was interesting to delve into the art scene. I thought it would be similar to the Hajazi scene, but it’s completely different. It was a massive learning experience for me to see that — given that we’re all from Saudi — there are so many different ways of working, ways of producing, ways of communicating.”




Maha Malluh, Sky Clouds, 2009-2015, 100 black polyester gloves filled with polyester and desert sands, praying rugs. (Courtesy of Galerie Krinzinger and Maha Malluh)

Riyadh’s rapid expansion, both physically and culturally, over the past decade contributes to the richness and diversity on show at AWR, the curators say.

“That’s the beauty of the Middle East, 10 years here is 100 years elsewhere,” Matarrese says. “I think what’s really smart about what Saudi is doing right now is they’ve learned from other people’s mistakes and they’re looking at how to navigate this in a better way.

“There’s one thing that is important in the DNA of what we are doing,” she continues. “Our visitors are not going to know what to expect. We really pushed the boundaries of what this could be showing; we are trying to deconstruct the conventional display models, to experiment with something else and re-articulate the dialogue between the different parts of the art world.”

For Harasani, the event is another marker of the artistic progress that has been made in the Kingdom in recent years.

“This did not exist when I was growing up,” she says. “The fact that we can see our dreams come to fruition now — and (see) bigger projects like Art Week Riyadh — I feel very lucky and privileged to be a part of that.”


How a new generation of Arab musicians is blending heritage and innovation

How a new generation of Arab musicians is blending heritage and innovation
Updated 08 November 2025

How a new generation of Arab musicians is blending heritage and innovation

How a new generation of Arab musicians is blending heritage and innovation
  • Emerging musicians are embracing bilingual lyrics and hybrid styles to reflect diverse identities and global cultural exchange
  • Creative hubs and community projects are helping independent artists collaborate, experiment, and reach wider audiences

DUBAI: On a small street in Beirut, the sound of an oud drifts through the open doors of a small cafe called Orenda. Inside, all eyes turn to Joe Kamel as his melody takes over, replacing the cafe’s buzz with a slower, softer mood.

A pharmacist by day, Kamel has built a second life through his music — one that reconnects people with something familiar and deeply sentimental.

“My passion was born at a very young age,” Kamel told Arab News.

“I have memories from perhaps the age of five, when I used to sing in a choir. That’s where my journey and love of music and culture began.”

When everyone around him wanted to learn guitar, he picked up the oud instead.

“I wanted to learn something close to my Arabic heritage,” he said. “Both worlds are exceedingly different, but one hectic career is balanced by my musical one to restore calm and peace.”

A pharmacist by day, Kamel has built a second life through his music. (Supplied)

At the cafe, his regular crowd is a mix of Lebanese locals and Europeans who may not understand the words, but still feel every note.

“Arabic music can be dramatic and romantic, but each song and chord tells a story,” he said.

For Kamel, that storytelling is what keeps his performances personal. If the music connects with even one listener, he said, that is enough to make it worthwhile.

He sees live performance as an exchange of energy, not just sound. Reading the room, he often adjusts his set on the spot to match the crowd’s mood.

“It’s hugely important to gauge what the audience wants,” he said. “Deviating from what I planned is something I’ll do if it means everyone enjoys the experience.”

Music events across the Arab world mix local heritage and global influences. ( Dubai World Trade Centre photo)

Kamel believes that renewed interest in traditional instruments such as the oud reflects a wider cultural shift. Many young people, he said, are looking for something they can feel — a break from digital music and a return to the authenticity of live performance.

That revival of live, communal music is not limited to Lebanon. Across the Arab world, a new generation of musicians is finding fresh ways to mix heritage and innovation.

From Riyadh’s warehouse parties to Dubai’s creative hubs and Cairo’s open-air concerts, a new generation of musicians is blurring boundaries between tradition and innovation.

Egyptian composer Hisham Kharma, who has performed in cities from Hamburg to Miami and at historic sites such as the Pyramids of Giza, says that it is a natural evolution.

“Living in such diverse cities taught me that music is universal, but each culture adds its own flavor,” he told Arab News.

Kharma said that nothing compares to performing live, where music becomes a dialogue rather than a presentation.

“On stage, the music becomes a conversation — you feel every reaction instantly,” he said. “It’s that shared emotion, that real-time connection, that keeps me coming back.”

Hisham Kharma says artists across the region are "being more daring, blending genres, and and redefining what Arab music can be.”  (Supplied)

For him, Arab identity in music is not about looking back — it is about carrying that sound forward. 

“Our heritage gives us identity, but innovation keeps us alive and connected to the present,” he said.

“When I perform in places like the Pyramids, it’s about showing that our culture isn’t ancient history — it’s evolving.”

He describes the moment as one of bold creativity.

“Artists across the region are being more daring, blending genres, and redefining what Arab music can be,” he said.

“Our culture is incredibly deep, and now we’re expressing it in fresh, modern ways.”

In , that creativity has found new visibility — and new confidence.

Artists such as TamTam are leading a cultural shift that feels personal as much as national. Her songs move between Arabic and English with ease, a reflection of her own story.

“It’s just who I am; it didn’t shape me; I shaped the music,” she told Arab News. “My identity is what defines my art.”

Tamtam's positivity beams, radiating from her personality to her music, which she attributed to her parents. (AN Photo by Mishari AlKhathran)

Her upcoming album, Ma3assalama, captures that duality; one side Arabic, one side English.

“It’s about the two sides of who I am; my Arabic roots and my Western identity that’s also a part of me,” she said. “I just hope it inspires people to embrace who they are, even if they don’t fit neatly into one box.”

TamTam has watched the country’s music scene transform in just a few years — from underground performances to global stages.

“I’m so proud of the artists coming from Saudi, each one with their own beautiful journey unfolding,” she said.

“It’s only the beginning, but honestly, every part of the journey matters — the beginning, the middle, the end, and everything in between.”

Beyond her own music, TamTam is helping to shape that journey for others through Goast Flower, a creative hub she founded to bring musicians together.

Beyond her own music, TamTam is helping to shape that journey for others through Goast Flower, a creative hub she founded to bring musicians together. (Supplied0

The name comes from the “ghost flower,” a plant that blooms without sunlight.

“It grows in the darkest parts of the forest,” TamTam said. “It blooms without needing light, and that really resonated with me as an independent artist who’s always kept creating, no matter what.”

Through Goast Flower’s Saudi Music Community, artists can find each other, collaborate and share resources.

“Big companies have told me they’re using the database to find and discover artists,” TamTam said. “I don’t want to gatekeep the data. I truly want people in the music community here to find each other more easily.”

She believes that real growth begins in small spaces — the cafes, courtyards and pop-up stages where young artists play their first shows.

“We hope that through the Saudi music community, these artists can find others to collaborate with, but more importantly, that they find a support system,” she said.gger.”

Goast Flower hosted an event last month with Apple Music MENA in Riyadh, where emerging musicians met industry professionals. (Supplied) 

Last month, Goast Flower hosted an event with Apple Music MENA in Riyadh, where emerging musicians met industry professionals and ended the night with a spontaneous jam session.

“It was such a beautiful night and a true testament to what community can create,” TamTam said. “These kinds of collaborations help artists learn, grow and dream bi

Whether it is the delicate strings of an oud in Beirut or an electronic beat pulsing through a Riyadh warehouse, these gatherings are doing something powerful — bringing people together through sound.

Tamtam says it is her fervent hope that through the Saudi music community, artists can find others to collaborate with. (Supplied)

Kamel’s evenings at Orenda may seem worlds away from Kharma’s symphonic shows or TamTam’s pop, but they all share the same intention; to connect, to express, to belong.

As Kharma put it: “Artists across the region are being more daring, blending genres, and redefining what Arab music can be.”

More than just a shift in style, this new wave of Arab music is helping people to reconnect — with each other, their roots and national identity.

“Lebanon has been through so much historically, and playing the oud is one of my ways of escaping some of the unfortunate situations we’ve lived through,” Kamel said. 

“I want my music to create a safe place for people to learn, enjoy, come together and leave with a feeling of pride, peace and love of music, heritage and culture.”