Arab Artists Organize Touring Exhibition in 3 Continents

The exhibition guide.
The exhibition guide.
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Arab Artists Organize Touring Exhibition in 3 Continents

The exhibition guide.
The exhibition guide.

In a first-of-its-kind event, the Jordanian capital is hosting a touring exhibition organized by three Arab artists: Salman Al Malik (Qatar), Mohammed Jaloos (Jordan), and Qasim al-Saadi (Iraq – The Netherlands).

The opening is scheduled for February 9. The exhibition is set to land in three other locations: the Cairo Amman Bank (CAB), Qatar’s Al-Markhiya Gallery, and The Netherlands’ Frank Welkenhuysen Gallery, in addition to two other countries in north and south Africa, according to the exhibition’s guide.

The three artists live and work thousands of kilometers apart, but this “didn’t prevent them from holding long talks, especially during a symposium organized by CAB Gallery two years ago, before the outbreak of the virus,” says the guide.

The three artists are looking forward to reconnecting and defying the isolation caused by the pandemic because they “believe art has an unlimited power, and beauty has courage as much as hope to face the hardships and challenges of the present,” writes CAB’s announcement of the exhibition. “Those artists stood to face loneliness with bravery and contributed to alleviate the impact of isolation and confinement on others,” said Al-Markhiya Gallery in its announcement of the exhibition.

“Art is an international language, a language with no boundaries. It’s filled with imagination and fineness. It’s the language of progress, society, cooperation, and friendship between cultures and people. It’s indeed the language of dream, astonishment, connection, and beauty…a language that is farther than any distance,” writes the announcement of Frank Welkenhuysen Gallery.



Partial Lunar Eclipse Will Be Visible over Saudi Arabia on Wednesday

The partial lunar eclipse can be easily observed with the naked eye, without special equipment. (SPA)
The partial lunar eclipse can be easily observed with the naked eye, without special equipment. (SPA)
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Partial Lunar Eclipse Will Be Visible over Saudi Arabia on Wednesday

The partial lunar eclipse can be easily observed with the naked eye, without special equipment. (SPA)
The partial lunar eclipse can be easily observed with the naked eye, without special equipment. (SPA)

A partial lunar eclipse will be visible from Earth early Wednesday morning, said the Jeddah Astronomy Society.

Society Director Eng. Majed Abu Zahra said the partial eclipse will be visible across Europe, much of Asia, Africa, North and South America, the Pacific, Atlantic, the Indian Oceans, the Arctic, and Antarctica.

The eclipse will last for one hour and three minutes, from 5:12 am to 6:15 am Saudi time. It will be the only local lunar eclipse of 2024, he added.

"The eclipse will begin simultaneously across all regions of Saudi Arabia as the full moon enters Earth's shadow at 5:12 am. The moon will then traverse from west to east in Earth's shadow, following its natural orbital path," he explained.

"The eclipse will reach its maximum at 5:44 am, with 3.9% of the moon's surface covered by Earth's shadow. After this peak, the moon will set in conjunction with sunrise in various parts of Saudi Arabia. It may appear reddish-copper or orange during this time, due to its proximity to the horizon and atmospheric effects, rather than the eclipse itself," he said.

Globally, observers will witness the moon gradually emerging from Earth's shadow until the partial eclipse ends and the moon's full illumination returns by 6:15 am.

Abu Zahra said the moon will be at perigee (the point in the moon orbit at which it is nearest to the earth) during this eclipse, which will make it appear larger. At the eclipse's peak, the moon's apparent diameter will be 6.7% larger than average, marking it the second supermoon of 2024.

Because it is close to the autumn equinox, it is also called harvest moon.

The partial lunar eclipse can be easily observed with the naked eye, without special equipment. However, binoculars or a small telescope can provide a clearer view of the moon's details.

Unlike solar eclipses, lunar eclipses do not pose any risk to the eyes, so no special precautions are necessary.