Moroccan museums: high art
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Our culture is our identity, our history. In every town you can visit these places charged with memories. And discover a heritage of universal interest.

Palaces and riads

Admire the ancient palaces, the riads which have been transformed into our museums. Their magnificent, richly decorated, exhibition rooms are often real works of art in themselves. As is the case in Marrakech with the Dar Si Saïd museum of Moroccan arts! You will be overcome by the exceptional wealth of the collections exhibited there.

Art and memory

At the Dar Batha in Fez, in the surroundings of a sumptuous palace, don't miss the rooms dedicated to arts and traditions, providing a real overview of knowledge. In Rabat, the Museum of Moroccan Art (formerly the Oudaïa Museum) presents unique pieces from pre-history up to the Islamic period. In Marrakech, in the Mnebhi palace at the heart of the medina, magnificent examples of the Koran reflect the richness of Arabic calligraphy. As for Meknès, its Dar Jamaï regional ethnographic museum is an Arabo-Andalusian architectural marvel which houses the essence of Moroccan craftsmanship in all its excellence and refinement.

Culture for everyone
In Morocco, going to the museum is a way of discovering our history and our origins. Every region is proud of its particular characteristics. Embroidered fabrics, ceramics, jewelry, wooden sculptures and leather objects are the pinnacle of our craftsmanship. You can also discover the museums devoted to contemporary art, like the one in Tangier housed in the former British consulate, or to ceramics in Safi, where the national museum has been established in an old citadel erected by the Portuguese.

The active side of the sea!
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Surfing, kitesurfing, windsurfing, diving…Thanks to its exceptional conditions and its two coasts, Morocco is the dream destination for all water sports.

The country with two coasts

More than 3500km of coast on two sides, the Atlantic ocean along a long seafront to the west and the Mediterranean sea along a wide coastal strip to the north… And perfect air and wind conditions everywhere.

More surfing and windsurfing
Come to the long sandy beaches of Oualidia, Dar Bouazza, Taghazout, Agadir and Essaouira, a city where numerous international competitions take place. To the north of Safi, the surf spot of Sidi Bouzid is an international standard point-break for surfers. Regular, fast and powerful, its wave is ranked among the top 10 in the world (a maximum of four meters high for a swell which can reach two meters).

More kite-surfing

Go down even further south, to the protected Dakhla Bay. A long and perfect right-breaking wave has led surfers to rank this Foum Labouir spot just behind Hawaii. Dakhla, like Tamuda Bay in the north, is also famous for its diving. Jet-skiing is also high on the agenda in a wide variety of resorts. In terms of weather, the trade wind blows across the coast from the end of March to mid-September. The consistently mild temperature allows pleasant enjoyment of these sports throughout the year. Add to this the great diversity of coasts, water which rarely falls below 18°C in the depths of winter, and you have a paradise for water sports!

Moroccan Fashion

Does an international designer have to necessarily start from Paris? Why not from Casablanca, Marrakesh, Fez, Agadir, Rabat ...

Well, Moroccan designers choose to showcase their collections in Morocco, as the people are the judge of their work while the place has no relevance for them, specially if the collections reflect originality and modernity of a specific culture and society on one hand, and on the other hand if the design and style are known to be acclaimed all over the world. This is exactly the case of Moroccan Fashion.

In Morocco, fashion preserves its traditional style inherited from various great civilizations that found their way to Northwest Africa. What is important in today's Moroccan fashion is the fusion of modern Western style with the traditional Moroccan fashion. Moroccan fashion has been recognized for its style and has garnered a reputation, winning awards in international fashion shows throughout Europe. This contemporary style responds to today's Moroccan women's needs: authenticity, sophistication, and fluid lines.

Women in the Western world are migrating towards this contemporary Moroccan fashion as it brings the Old World to them in a New World elegance and chic style. The Moroccan Kaftan transitioned from traditional apparel made from heavy and excessive fabric to today's sheer, form-fitting, and bare gowns. Moroccan dress has more westernized arms that are less cumbersome and allow for more natural movement without excess fabric. These are two movements in fashion, which represent a progressive current towards Western dress.

Various ateliers in Morocco design traditional and adopt contemporary fashions to meet customers different taste and needs. There is no dress, which is replicated stylistically, though some may seem similar, each is unique. Moroccan fashion's goal is for various lines of clothing to attract a myriad of different women with different styles and fashion needs.

The process begins by importing high quality fabrics from India, Japan, China, the Middle East, and France. Once these fabrics arrive, they are carefully and personally handled and form a kinetic relationship with designers and tailors, feeling them for motion, pliability, sensuality, and texture, then the process of design for the dress whose inspiration comes specifically from that fabric's aura begins. Thus, it is the fabric, which inspires the design, with an attempt to bring forward this artistic energy in the choosing of colors which range from chartreuse to rich rusts, enhanced often with gold or silver threading or embroidery. Understatement becomes crucial in any presentation. Moroccan tailors often rely on tribal accessories to complete the outfit and bring to it an Old World quality while fusing with New World chic.

As Nader said: "design is like a language”, it is often specific to a place and to a culture as a whole. objects reflects society and the way of life of which they are part. To speak about design in Morocco is the same as speaking about ‘a creative act’ that confronts materials with technical and cultural baggage. It is as well a willingness to find the balance between earned knowledge and the search of new paths. The challenge is to conciliate the richness and abundance of our patrimony with the technical and cultural requirement of the present and the future. If one considers design as a human activity consisting of conceiving objects of daily life, then the culture of design is ancient in Morocco. There is no doubt that it’s one of the world’s oldest professions . Then it is only a matter of researching our roots, our history and the multiple and diverse influences that have made the interior landscapes of past generations.

“What about the relationship between our ancestors and objects?” wondered Nader. “ Personally, I found that there are objects with an intimate sense tied to functions. Some designers would dream to invent an object like the Kasaà . this is a wooden tray on which women rolled grain with an open , hospitable movement, gentle and not emphatic, mute and humble. This same tray would serve as a table for the family and for an always welcome guest. A thousand years old, the Kasaà is not tied to any formal fashion, as one sometimes think about those objects that are either uniquely decorative or uniquely functional. The Kasaà is not the only object where formal Moroccan tradition expresses all its meanings.

There are others like The barouche “sleeper” and the Kaftan. The Tagine plate has become only a serving dish, but before it used to have many uses in cooking the most delicious food of the poor as well as for the very very rich”. The future of Moroccan design is most probably in how it relates of the foundation of the values of Moroccan society.