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Noor Riyadh 2025 Lights Up Citywide, Signaling the Return of the World's Largest Light Art Festival

Noor Riyadh announces 59 participating artists for 2025, representing 24 nationalities, including 60 artworks and more than 35 new commissions in a celebration of light and art from Nov. 20 to Dec. 6, 2025.

November 20, 2025 11:39 AM
EDT
(EZ Newswire)
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Safeya Binzagr, "Scenes of a Matrimony" / Source: Noor Riyadh (EZ Newswire)
Safeya Binzagr, "Scenes of a Matrimony" / Source: Noor Riyadh (EZ Newswire)
Abdulrahman Al-Soliman, "Place of History's Inscription" / Source: Noor Riyadh (EZ Newswire)
Abdulrahman Al-Soliman, "Place of History's Inscription" / Source: Noor Riyadh (EZ Newswire)
Encor Studio, "Sliced" / Source: Noor Riyadh (EZ Newswire)
Encor Studio, "Sliced" / Source: Noor Riyadh (EZ Newswire)
Source: Noor Riyadh (EZ Newswire)
Source: Noor Riyadh (EZ Newswire)
Shinji Ohmaki, "Liminal Air Space-Time" / Source: Noor Riyadh (EZ Newswire)
Shinji Ohmaki, "Liminal Air Space-Time" / Source: Noor Riyadh (EZ Newswire)
Source: Noor Riyadh (EZ Newswire)
Source: Noor Riyadh (EZ Newswire)
Noor Riyadh logo / Source: Noor Riyadh (EZ Newswire)
Noor Riyadh logo / Source: Noor Riyadh (EZ Newswire)

Presented by Riyadh Art under the Royal Commission for Riyadh City (RCRC), the fifth edition of Noor Riyadh will illuminate the capital every night from Nov. 20 until Dec. 6, 2025.

This year’s festival is curated under the theme “In the Blink of an Eye,” referencing the rapid transformation shaping Riyadh. Large-scale artworks are grouped across six locations, positioned alongside both heritage buildings and the sleek, modern lines of Riyadh's award-winning metro system and contemporary architecture.

Curated by Mami Kataoka (curatorial advisory lead; director, Mori Art Museum, Tokyo), Riyadh-based curator Sara Almutlaq, and Li Zhenhua (curator and founder of Beijing Art Lab), the festival presents 60 artworks by 59 artists from 24 countries, with more than 35 new commissions by leading Saudi and international artists.

"Each year, Noor Riyadh grows in ambition and impact,” says Nouf Almoneef, festival director of Noor Riyadh. “I am proud that we continue to champion artists, strengthen the creative economy, and build connections between Saudi talent and the international arts community. Together, we are shaping Riyadh into a global capital for culture today and for generations to come.”

Highlight artworks on view include: 

László Zsolt Bordos (Hungary), "Astrum," 2025 — Powerful beams atop Al Faisaliah Tower become a moving planetary compass, pointing to celestial bodies in real time. With lasers beaming up to 7 kilometers, the work turns the city skyline into an astronomical stage, inviting viewers to reconnect with the cosmos above metropolitan Riyadh.

Vali Chincișan (Romania), "The Vision Grid," 2025 — The façade of KAFD Metro Station is transformed into a shifting lattice of light and sound. The oscillating patterns fracture into color, synchronized to an electronic score, featuring a precise meditation on perception in flux, where architecture seems to inhale data and geometry becomes music.

Christophe Berthonneau (France), "Synthesis," 2025 — Architecture, drone choreography, and mapping are merged into a single kinetic performance. In this collaboration with László Zsolt Bordos, the building appears to levitate, its façade a recombinant geometry while drones extend the light ballet skyward in a dialogue between art and engineering.

fuse* (Italy), "Luna Somnium," 2025 — Italian art and architecture collective transforms detailed lunar data into a multisensory cosmic experience within a towering square metal structure. Aligned with orbital rhythms, ethereal visuals oscillate between abstraction and cosmology, turning scientific observation into a meditative dream of celestial yearning.  

James Clar (Philippines and United States), "When the Sky Reaches the Ground - (a moment frozen)," 2025 — A massive sculptural bolt of frozen lightning, constructed from neon and grid scaffolding. His art captures a fleeting moment of immense speed and intense energy, symbolizing both technological mastery and the nuanced ways communication systems shape our perception of reality.

Fatma Abdulhadi (Saudi Arabia), "Keep your eyes on the light: Into Another Garden,"2025 — Suspended in ghost fabrics, an illusory shadow garden invites the viewer to flow into the room of the heart, between healing and growth. It is a space for pause and repose, where one is invited to embody their inner state of being and reflect on the subtleties of shadow, of self, and of time.

Ahmad Angawi (Saudi Arabia), "Algorithms of Light: The Falcon," 2025 — Angawi explores the intersection of heritage, motion, and transformation, drawing inspiration from Najdi Sadu patterns and the Saudi falcon, embodying sublime rhythm and geometry. Its calligraphic design elongates to inhabit space without overt declaration, expressing a quiet statement of permanence.

Alex Schweder (United States), "Clockwise Invitations," 2025 — An expansive, luminous, inflatable environment is brought to life by its visitors. Chambers expand, passages shift, and light transforms as audiences gather, turning orientation into a shared choreography between bodies and air.

Press information:

Download the full media kit here.

About Noor Riyadh

Since 2021, Noor Riyadh has attracted more than 9.6 million visitors and spectators, presenting more than 550 artworks by 500 artists from around the world. Alongside its citywide installations, the festival offers a vibrant public program of community activities, workshops, and panels that bring people together through art. The festival continues to embody Riyadh Art’s mission to enrich daily life through creativity, to develop the creative economy, and to inspire dialogue across communities.

Spanning the city from north to south, the festival locations include: Riyadh Art space at JAX District, a former industrial area that is now home to artist studios, galleries, and contemporary arts events; KAFD Metro Station, designed by Zaha Hadid architects; stc Metro Station, designed by Gerber Architekten; Al Faisaliah Tower, designed by British design practice Foster & Partners; and the heritage areas Qasr Al Hokm District and King Abdulaziz Historical Center, both in the historic heart of Riyadh.

“Noor Riyadh is defined by its artists — their ideas, their courage, and their vision,” says Nouf Almoneef, festival director of Noor Riyadh. “Each work captures the city’s momentum through light, reminding us that creativity is a universal language that connects cultures and inspires dialogue.”

For more information, visit riyadhart.sa/en/noor-riyadh.

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