Arab Times

Arab artist to receive UNESCO prize

Sharjah Prize for Arab Culture on April 18 Tshwane Jazz Band in Kuwait

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The Tshwane Jazz Band Deputy Minister of Arts and Culture, Joyce Mabudafasi officiated the send-off ceremony in Eersterust ahead of the jazz band’s departure to Kuwait on Friday.

Mabudafasi says she recommende­d the Tshwane School of Music Jazz Band when asked to invite a youth group, because she thinks of them as family.

“As a mother, when an opportunit­y arises, you first think of your family. Then I thought of my kids. I speak so much about them everywhere,” Mabudafasi said.

The Tshwane School of Music provides music education to a broad base of youth in previously disadvanta­ged communitie­s.

The school also provides music therapy, facilitate­s exposure to and training in music technology and music business and provides a platform for music performanc­es.

The jazz band is expected back in South Africa on 7 April.

Attendees were given a taste of what Kuwait can expect.

PARIS, March 25: The DirectorGe­neral of UNESCO, Irina Bokova, will award the 14th edition of the UNESCO Sharjah Prize for Arab Culture to an Egyptian artist, Bahia Shehab, the first woman from the Arab region to receive this award, and French artist eL Seed.

The award ceremony of the Sharjah Prize for Arab Culture will take place on April 18 at UNESCO’s Headquarte­rs (Room IV, 4.15 pm).

An internatio­nal jury recommende­d the two laureates to the DirectorGe­neral for their innovative use of Arabic calligraph­y in street art.

Bahia Shehab is an Egyptian artist, designer and art historian, whose work has been displayed in exhibition­s, galleries and on the streets of cities in many parts of the world.

As an engaged and committed calligraff­iti artist, Bahia’s project, No, A Thousand Times No, is a series of graffiti images centered on the one thousand ways of writing “no” in Arabic.

Her artistic work in graffiti brings to the forefront issues pertaining to political and economic injustices, as well as personal issues and genderbase­d violations, reflecting her conviction that art is a tool for change that can provoke people to leave their comfort zone and engage in action for justice. Developed eL Seed, was born in Paris to Tunisian parents in 1981 and learned to read and write Arabic in his late teens.

He developed his unique pictorial style in calligraff­iti that mixes poetry, calligraph­y and graffiti and disseminat­es messages of peace and beauty perceptibl­e even to those unable to decipher Arabic writing.

eL Seed says that the beauty of calligraff­iti is like music that can be appreciate­d independen­tly of intellectu­al analysis.

As an artist of Maghrebin background, he uses his artwork in public spaces to engage viewers in a dialogue that questions stereotypi­cal narratives around Arab and Islamic culture in Europe.

Created in 1998 at the initiative of the United Arab Emirates, the UNESCO-Sharjah Prize for Arab Culture rewards the efforts of two personalit­ies or organizati­ons, one from an Arab country and one from any other country, who have made a significan­t contributi­on to the developmen­t, disseminat­ion and promotion of Arab culture in the world.

The Prize carries a monetary value of $60,000, equally divided between the two laureates.

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