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'Connected To The Whole Universe': Saudi Women Artists Show Their Work In The U.S.

Dina Alhamrani's photos (at right) show a bride wearing a red "pre-wedding dress" and gold-leaf henna designs on her hands. "I want to tell brides never to let go of their heritage," Alhamrani says. "We have very, very vibrant colors. That's the message I try to convey. And the bride is looking at the light: That's a happy thing that she wants."
Eslah Attar
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NPR
Dina Alhamrani's photos (at right) show a bride wearing a red "pre-wedding dress" and gold-leaf henna designs on her hands. "I want to tell brides never to let go of their heritage," Alhamrani says. "We have very, very vibrant colors. That's the message I try to convey. And the bride is looking at the light: That's a happy thing that she wants."

"Not everything in Saudi Arabia is black and white," says photographer Dina Alhamrani, one of 11 Saudi artists whose work is featured in an exhibition this week at the Saudi Embassy in Washington, D.C. The exhibition, called "Women's Point of View," features the creations of students and recent graduates in visual communications from Jeddah's all-female Dar al-Hekma University.

Their photography, drawings, motion graphics designs, even clothing (a "running abaya," a full-body cloak for athletes) make up the exhibition, which runs through Friday. Amid Crown Prince Muhammed bin Salman's vision of a dynamic Saudi Arabia, it is in keeping with the kingdom's efforts to portray the country as modern.

More than half the country's university graduates are female, according to embassy spokesperson Fatimah Baeshen. In recent months, Saudi women have been granted rights such as attending soccer games and holding positions at the Justice Ministry — and there's been resolution of what Dar al-Hekma University president Suhair al-Qurashi calls the "very famous issue of driving." In September, Saudi King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud lifted the country's ban on women taking the wheel.

Saudi Arabia's Vision 2030 economic reform and modernization plan says women are a "great asset" and vows to "develop their talents, invest in their productive capabilities and enable them to strengthen their future and contribute to the development of our society and economy."

Rawabi al-Sanusi, 23, (right) speaks with another artist at the exhibition at the Saudi embassy. "I always liked to draw," she says. "I was like the weird one in my family." She designed a hardcover book paying tribute to generations past, "to show the diversity of Saudi Arabian families," she says. Her great-great-grandfather, she says, "was a king of Libya for a short time."
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Rawabi al-Sanusi, 23, (right) speaks with another artist at the exhibition at the Saudi embassy. "I always liked to draw," she says. "I was like the weird one in my family." She designed a hardcover book paying tribute to generations past, "to show the diversity of Saudi Arabian families," she says. Her great-great-grandfather, she says, "was a king of Libya for a short time."

Eleven Dar al-Hekma-educated artists — students of U.S. photographer Linda Schaefer, an assistant professor there — came to Washington to present their work at the exhibition opening, at the invitation of Ambassador Prince Khalid bin Salman, a son of the Saudi king who the New York Times described last year as "a prime example of the type of modern Saudi official the kingdom wants to show the American public. He knows his way around Instagram, enjoys political cartoons and expresses interest in American pop culture."

The ambassador, says Baeshen, "was keen to showcase [the artists' work] at the embassy, supporting women coming over and standing by their work and speaking from the first-person perspective."

Schaefer, their teacher, says, "The world doesn't really know a lot about women from Saudi Arabia. People have preconceived notions about who they are. When they meet face to face, they understand a lot more about them than the labels assigned to them."

(Left) Sheitha al-Aiyash, a motion graphics designer, stands with a poster for her project encouraging people to become more active. The poster reads, "Food is not your entertainment. Look around you and change the way you think." (Right) Rana Fatami stands in front of a poster for her "Historical Jeddah" tourism app.
Eslah Attar / NPR
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NPR
(Left) Sheitha al-Aiyash, a motion graphics designer, stands with a poster for her project encouraging people to become more active. The poster reads, "Food is not your entertainment. Look around you and change the way you think." (Right) Rana Fatami stands in front of a poster for her "Historical Jeddah" tourism app.

"Women see differently," says motion graphics designer Sheitha al-Aiyash, 25. "I want to try a lot of things. I want to be a director. To do everything, to know everything — that's very nice."

Fellow motion graphics graduate Malath al-Nemari, 23, who designed a series of illustrated photos showing hijab-clad women with wings reading books, wanted to express her love of the written word. "My vision," she says, "is about books that make people feel free and connected to the world, and peaceful. I want to represent Saudi, Middle Eastern women as educated and connected to the whole universe."

The artists, all students or recent graduates of the all-female Dar Al-Hekma University, wore pins (left) with the school logo. Rawabi al-Sanusi turns pages in a book she designed on old family stories (right).
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The artists, all students or recent graduates of the all-female Dar Al-Hekma University, wore pins (left) with the school logo. Rawabi al-Sanusi turns pages in a book she designed on old family stories (right).
Bashayer Alkhayyat, the designer of a running abaya, stands in front of a poster showing a life-size, interactive installation she created depicting a woman running in an abaya and hijab. Viewers are encouraged to cut the colored threads, which she says represent "limitations from fitness."
Eslah Attar / NPR
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NPR
Bashayer Alkhayyat, the designer of a running abaya, stands in front of a poster showing a life-size, interactive installation she created depicting a woman running in an abaya and hijab. Viewers are encouraged to cut the colored threads, which she says represent "limitations from fitness."

Rana Fatami demonstrated her "Historical Jeddah" app, which she designed to encourage tourism in the city's historical center, a World Heritage Site. The app includes a wayfinding system, walking distances (which she measured by enlisting the help of volunteers) and maps. "Google Maps doesn't read the narrow streets," Fatami explains. "This app solves this. I hope the government will adopt it."

Photographer Sara Alghamdi describes her work to visitors at the Saudi Embassy exhibition.
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NPR
Photographer Sara Alghamdi describes her work to visitors at the Saudi Embassy exhibition.

Bashayer Alkhayyat, a running enthusiast modeling a lightweight, gray-and-blue one-piece abaya of her own design, says, "I don't want women to feel anything is holding them back." She's also designed an app for women to find running buddies so they won't have to exercise alone. Running is becoming more of a trend among women in Jeddah, she says, but "I'm still not satisfied. I want more people to run."

Artists chat at the exhibition opening. A photograph by Dar Al-Hekma graduate Lina Jamjoon of a woman leaning against a car sculpture at a Jeddah landmark hangs on a wall nearby.
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NPR
Artists chat at the exhibition opening. A photograph by Dar Al-Hekma graduate Lina Jamjoon of a woman leaning against a car sculpture at a Jeddah landmark hangs on a wall nearby.

Sara al-Ghamdi, 24, says she hopes her photographs of a woman wearing an orange turban will show Saudi women as "strong" and "modern."

"If they wear a hijab," she says, women "feel shy, like they can't follow their dreams. I want to tell them even if you cover your hair, it's not going to stop your dreams."

Copyright 2023 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Hannah Bloch is lead digital editor on NPR's international desk, overseeing the work of NPR correspondents and freelance journalists around the world.