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February 25, 2009
Jordan participates
in the Kennedy Center’s Arabesque festival |
Washington, DC - From February 23 to March 15, 2009, the Kennedy Center
presented Arabesque: Arts of the Arab World; an unprecedented three-week
celebration of Arab arts and culture that includes music, dance, theatre as well
as exhibitions of art, jewelry, fashion, photos, and cuisine representing the
twenty-two members of the Arab League. The festival is presented in cooperation
with the League of Arab States. (View
Photos of the event)
Jordan is a major participant at Arabesque in its various components; music,
art, and fashion. Jordanian musical talent will be represented by the award
winning group RUM, led by Tareq Al Nasser and directed by Russol Al Nasser. The
group, which now includes more than twenty members, explores Oriental and
Western traditions to form a new listening and imaginative experience.
One of the major features of the festival is the unique and celebrated
exhibition of women artists from the Islamic world; “Breaking the Veils,” which
is in turn inspired and spearheaded by Her Royal Highness Princess Wijdan Al
Hashemi. The exhibition brings together work of female artists from the Arab
world and beyond in an attempt to break the stereotypes attached to women in the
Islamic world. The exhibition includes paintings and etchings of women artists
from Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrain, Sudan, Yemen, Palestine, Morocco,
Iraq, Egypt, Lebanon, Tunisia, Algeria, the U.A. E, Syria and Oman. The
exhibition works come from the permanent collection of the Jordan National
Gallery of Fine Arts in Amman. The exhibit is currently on a U.S. tour, led and
presented by the ArtReach Foundation, an Atlanta-based nonprofit.
In coordination with the Information Bureau at the Embassy of Jordan in
Washington, DC, the Kingdom participated in the souk and the wedding dress
exhibition. The souk was the centerpiece of the Arabesque festival, representing
art and handicrafts from the Arab world. From Jordan, the souk featured
handicrafts from the Jordan River Foundation, exquisite jewelry by the two
prominent Jordanian designers Nadia Dajani and Lama Hourani, unique pieces of
Islamic and Arab calligraphy by the renowned Jordanian artist Farouk Lambaz and
modern artistic pieces from Jordanian-American artists based in Maryland,
Nisreen AbuDail and Lina Mrouz. The souk also included vendors from other Arab
countries; thereby reflecting the richness and beauty of traditional crafts, as
well as the creativity and contemporary stylings of the Arab world. The souk was
open daily over the course of the festival.
A Jordanian wedding dress from the southern city of Ma’an represented Jordan in
the especially curated “Brides of the Arab World” exhibit. “Brides of the Arab
World” brought together more than forty elaborate and colorful dresses
traditionally worn by brides throughout the twenty two Arab countries. The Ma’an
wedding ensemble is from the private collection of Mrs. Widad Kawar, who during
the past five decades has amassed one of the largest collections of costumes
from Jordan and Palestine. Kawar is internationally renowned for her efforts to
research, collect, and preserve traditions Arab handwork, and is credited with
saving many regional costumes from disappearing completely. (View
Photos of the event)
Commenting on the festival, His Royal Highness Prince Zeid Ra’ad; Jordan’s
Ambassador to the United States commended the Kennedy Center for spearheading
such a “unique and impressive endeavor” that aims to “present the complex beauty
of our region and abundant talent of our people.” He said that Jordan is “proud”
to have participated in the three-week long festival that marks the largest
presentation of the Arab arts in the United States. “We look forward to a
magnificent festival and we hope artistic talent reflected in Arabesque will
contribute to an open and candid dialogue between the United States and the Arab
world,” added Prince Zeid.
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