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Dubai Fountain takes a break — Here's where to catch stunning water shows in the UAE

Dubai Fountain takes a break — Here's where to catch stunning water shows in the UAE

Gulf News24-04-2025
Dubai: The Dubai Fountain delighted visitors for the final time on April 19, as it now prepares for a major transformation. According to Emaar, the iconic attraction will be closed for around five months, with renovations and upgrades set to begin in May.
But while the Dubai Fountain undergoes its exciting facelift, the UAE is home to several other mesmerising water shows, many of which combine music, light, fire, and water in ways that are just as thrilling. Some hold Guinness World Records, others feature scores by award-winning composers, and best of all, every single one is free to watch.
From high-tech laser shows to fountains set against coastal views, here are the top water shows across the UAE to enjoy while you wait for the Dubai Fountain's grand return.
1. IMAGINE – Dubai Festival City Mall
Located at Festival Bay, IMAGINE is Dubai Festival City Mall's record-breaking visual spectacle that delivers a sensory journey through light, water, fire, and sound. This Guinness World Record-winning show holds titles for the largest water screen projection and largest permanent projection mapping in the world.
Combining video mapping, 360-degree fountains, high-powered lasers and surround sound, IMAGINE uses over 2.5 million lumens of light and 30 synchronised fountains for a truly immersive experience.
Showtimes:
Monday to Thursday: Every 30 minutes from 7pm to 10pm
Friday to Sunday: Every 30 minutes from 7pm to 11pm
2. Sharjah Musical Fountain – Al Majaz Waterfront, Sharjah
A beloved icon in the city since the late 1970s, the Sharjah Musical Fountain sends water jets soaring up to 100 metres into the air. Spanning over 220 metres wide, the cybernetic fountains blend light, laser, video and audio in mesmerising, choreographed performances.
Visitors can enjoy the spectacle from the surrounding restaurants and cafés at Al Majaz Waterfront, offering stunning views of the show set against the tranquil Khaled Lagoon.
Showtimes:
Evening performances take place daily from Saturday to Wednesday, as well as on Thursday and Friday nights.
3. Surreal Waterfall – Expo City Dubai
Located in the Jubilee District of Expo City Dubai, the Surreal Waterfall is a dynamic installation that fuses art, engineering, and storytelling. Water appears to defy gravity as it cascades upward along towering walls, accompanied by synchronised music, fire effects, and choreographed splashes.
Created by WET Design (the team behind the Burj Khalifa fountain) and Ramin Djawadi (composer of the Game of Thrones soundtrack), this immersive experience is both visually and emotionally powerful.
Opening Hours:
Daily from 10am to 10pm. The site may close to the public during private or special events.
4. Khorfakkan Waterfall – Sharjah
Blending nature and design, the Khorfakkan Waterfall stands beside a Roman-inspired amphitheatre on the Sharjah coast. The man-made 45-metre waterfall was carved from natural rock and is beautifully lit in the evenings. Above, visitors can sometimes access viewing windows to watch the water flow from the top.
The adjoining amphitheatre, which can seat over 3,500 people, features a modern cooling system and regularly hosts public events. Both the waterfall and amphitheatre overlook the bay, offering a scenic seaside escape.
5. Dubai Marina Musical Fountain
Tucked at the entrance to Marina Walk near the Dubai Marina Towers, this smaller but lively musical fountain delights passersby with shows every 20 minutes. A smart control system analyses each music track, synchronising light and water jets for a rhythmic, multi-sensory display.
With three powerful speakers and more than 50 coloured LEDs illuminating every burst of water, this show adds a touch of magic to an evening stroll through the Marina.
Showtimes:
6. The Fountains – Yas Island, Abu Dhabi
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After a decade under lights, Amna Al Qubaisi steers her career in a new direction
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time6 days ago

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After a decade under lights, Amna Al Qubaisi steers her career in a new direction

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Robin Givhan chronicles Virgil Abloh's rise to fashion fame
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Gulf Today

time05-08-2025

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Robin Givhan chronicles Virgil Abloh's rise to fashion fame

With his calm and cool demeanour, fashion disruptor and multi-hyphenate Virgil Abloh artfully challenged the fashion industry's traditions to leave his mark as a Black creative, despite his short-lived career. In the years since his 2021 death at just 41, his vision and image still linger. Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Robin Givhan sheds new light on how Abloh ascended the ranks of one of the top luxury fashion houses and captivated the masses with her latest book, 'Make It Ours: Crashing the Gates of Culture with Virgil Abloh.' In the book out recently, Givhan documents Abloh's early life growing up as the son of Ghanaian immigrants in Rockford, Illinois, his days as graduate student studying architecture and his working relationship and friendship with Kanye West. Before taking the helm of Louis Vuitton as the house's first Black menswear creative director, Abloh threw himself into his creative pursuits including fine art, architecture, DJing and design. Abloh remixed his interests with his marketing genius and channeled it into fashion with streetwear labels like Been Trill and Pyrex Vision. These endeavours were the launchpad for his luxury streetwear label Off-White, known for its white diagonal lines, quotation marks, red zip ties and clean typeface. Off-White led to Abloh's collaboration with Ikea, where he designed a rug with 'KEEP OFF' in all-white letters and also with Nike where he deconstructed and reenvisioned 10 of Nike's famous shoe silhouettes. Throughout his ventures, Abloh built a following of sneakerheads and so-called hypebeasts who liked his posts, bought into his brands and showed up in droves outside his fashion shows. Social media made Abloh accessible to his fans and he tapped into that. Off-White had built a loyal following and some critics. Givhan, a Washington Post senior critic-at-large, openly admits that she was among the latter early on. Givhan said she was fascinated that Abloh's popularity was more than his fashion. For her latest project, Givhan spoke with The Associated Press on how she approached each of Abloh's creative undertakings and his legacy during a period of heightened racial tension in America. Can you talk about the process of writing about all of his creative endeavors and how they shaped his career? The skater culture — in part because it was such a sort of subculture that also had a very specific aesthetic and was such a deep part of the whole world of streetwear — and then the DJing part intrigued me because so much of his work as a designer seems to reflect a kind of DJ ethos, where you're not creating the melody and you're not creating the lyrics. You're taking these things that already exist and you're remixing them and you're responding to the crowd and the crowd is informing you. And so much of that, to me, could also be used to describe the way that he thought about fashion and the way that he designed. What role would you say that Virgil has had in the fashion industry today? He certainly raised the question within the industry of what is the role of the creative director? How much more expansive is that role? ... And I do think he has really forced the question of how are we defining luxury? Like what is a luxury brand? And is it something that is meant to sort of have this lasting impact? Is it supposed to be this beautifully crafted item? Or is it really just a way of thinking about value and beauty and desirability? And if it's those things, then really it becomes something that is quite sort of quite personal and can be quite based on the community in which you live. How did he use social media to his advantage and to help catapult his career? He really used social media as a way of connecting with people as opposed to just sort of using it as kind of a one-way broadcast. He was telling his side of things, but he was also listening to other people. He was listening to that feedback. That's also what made him this larger-than-life person for a lot of people, because not only was he this creative person who was in conversation with fans and contemporaries, but he was this creative person inside. Associated Press

Maroon 5 to headline Atlantis, The Palm's iconic New Year's Eve Gala Dinner
Maroon 5 to headline Atlantis, The Palm's iconic New Year's Eve Gala Dinner

What's On

time04-08-2025

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