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Noor Riyadh wraps up with 2.8m visitors & six Guinness titles

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Noor Riyadh, the Saudi capital’s citywide annual festival of light and art, celebrated its second edition with bigger and bolder figures, including six Guinness World Records titles. Foremost of the record titles that the event achieved is for the largest light art festival, as this year, the festival tripled in size, presenting 201 artworks by more than 130 artists, surpassing the minimum requiremen­t of 185 installati­ons.

In addition, Noor Riyadh 2022 welcomed 2.8 million visitors across its 40 citywide locations and five hubs, an impressive achievemen­t that far surpasses the footfall of its inaugural edition in March 2021.

This year, the festival was held under the theme “We Dream of New Horizons,” which centered around a sense of hopefulnes­s for the future, as well as confidence in renewal and transforma­tion. “We Dream of New Horizons” was curated by Hervé Mikaeloff, Dorothy Di Stefano, and Jumana Ghouth, along with curatorial adviser Arnaud Morand.

Noor Riyadh 2022 included at least 90 new commission­s from internatio­nal and Saudi artists, such as Ahaad Alamoudi, Abdullah Al-Othman, Daniah Al-Saleh, Rashed Al-Shashai, Sarah Brahim, Daniel Buren, Bricklab, Douglas Gordon, Tadashi Kawamata, Alicja Kwade, Jean-Michel Othoniel, and Muhannad Shono. Marc Brickman’s unforgetta­ble aerial installati­ons that use 1,990 drones as their medium won the Guinness title for the most drones performing an aerial dance display. The choreograp­hed drone display, titled “The Order of Chaos: Chaos in Order,” featured a swarm of drones that moved in fluid choreograp­hy over the skies of King Abdullah Park. Meanwhile, the spectacula­r “Pulse of Light” by show designer Martin Arnaud is the reason behind two new records achieved: The largest laser show, in terms of area covered,

and the longest distance covered by a laser light show. The nightly show, which beamed laser light across King Fahd Road, connecting the city’s most recognizab­le skyscraper­s Kingdom Tower, Faisaliah Tower and Majdoul Tower with light, reached up to 14.4 million square meters, with lasers stretching 15 kilometers in distance, more than doubling the minimum requiremen­ts in place.

“Pulse of Light” also broke two ad

ditional records, namely the largest mesh screen on a building and highest mesh screen on a building, for its installati­on on Kingdom Tower. Prince Badr bin Farhan Al-Saud, minister of culture, board member of the Royal Commission for Riyadh City and chairman of the Steering Committee for Riyadh Art, said: “The success of Noor Riyadh 2022 shows how visionary leadership can elevate arts and culture to new heights. Through the unwavering support of King Salman and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, prime minister and chairman of the Royal Commission for Riyadh City’s Board of Directors, the country’s culture sector will rise to the aspiration­s of Vision 2030. Fulfilling Riyadh Art’s aims, Noor Riyadh provides a platform for emerging

ing and establishe­d artists to share their ideas here and beyond. To see a Saudi-created initiative break records and put the nation in the forefront of the global art scene as the largest light art festival in the world, creates a moment of pride.” “Through the continued efforts of all our partners, such initiative­s will cement our place within the internatio­nal cultural landscape,” he added. With the citywide festival ending on Nov. 19, Noor Riyadh will continue its programmin­g through the worldclass exhibition “From Spark to Spirit,” curated by Neville Wakefield and associate curator Gaida Al-Mogren. The exhibition traces the role of light as a signal for change, exploring themes such as the “Technologi­es of Light,” “Architecto­nics of Light” and

“Consciousn­ess of Light.” Using the “Light and Space Movement” from the 1960s in California — which reflected changes in the establishe­d order — as a reference point, “From Spark to Spirit” proposes how light and art can offer ways to think through the rapid cultural transforma­tions shaping the Middle East. The show includes works by 30 artists, including Doug Aitken, Zeinab Al-Hashemi, Zahrah Al-Ghamdi, Refik Anadol, Larry Bell, Jim Campbell, John Edmark, Phillip K. Smith III, Diana Thater, Haroon Mirza and Theories of Imaginatio­n.

The exhibition runs until Feb. 4, 2023, accompanie­d by a series of talks, workshops, and community engagement programs for audiences of various ages and interests.

 ?? ?? Noor Riyadh, the Saudi capital’s citywide annual festival of light and art, celebrated its second edition with six Guinness World Records titles.
Noor Riyadh, the Saudi capital’s citywide annual festival of light and art, celebrated its second edition with six Guinness World Records titles.

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