3 edifices adorned with artistic paintings of lights embodying Sharjah's achievements

  • The festival performances will continue until February 20 across the emirate.

    From the source

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The "Sharjah Lights Festival 2022" continues to dazzle visitors with its picturesque light shows, which adorn the buildings and edifices of the emirate, embodying the history of Sharjah's development and its future visions, in illustrated stories that celebrate the ancient Islamic heritage, which is characterized by the architecture of the buildings in the heart of the emirate.

The festival sites receive visitors during weekdays, to enjoy performances from 6 to 11 pm, while visitors receive during the weekend, from 6 pm to 12 midnight.

The shows will continue until February 20, in all locations across the emirate, including three architectural edifices adorned with artistic panels of lights, embodying the emirate's achievements and its future, such as: Al Majaz Waterfront, the Noble Qur’an Complex, and the University City Hall in Sharjah.

Where the “Al Majaz Waterfront” is decorated with an innovative show called “The Festival Gallery”, which is in the middle of the facade, and through it shows the latest advanced technologies in light shows that attract the audience, to watch the individual light panels, and allow them to see the reflections of geometric shapes, and the twinkling lights on a lake Khaled.

The presentation dedicated to the site of the Noble Qur’an Complex bears the title “The Language of Immortality.” This presentation relies on a narrative style that goes back in time, while the beginning here is from the future and from infinity, all the way to the earth, where the language of eternity integrates various civilized sciences such as engineering and Arabic calligraphy. The arabesque patterns in one crucible highlight the lofty position of the Islamic civilization, and then the show moves to raise a controversial question about the future of these Islamic shapes and decorations, to then appear those traditional decorations such as arabesques, calligraphy and arks as if rising from the middle of the quicksand.

In the University City Hall, the “Swirl of Light” show depicts the successive stages of life in the ancient past of Sharjah, as the hall is the appropriate place for this story that embodies the great interest that the emirate attaches to education and heritage, and highlights the importance of the sea and the library in the life cycle.

• The festival sites receive visitors during weekdays, to enjoy shows from 6 to 11 pm.

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