The <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/arts-culture/art/2021/11/29/egypts-forever-is-now-show-revealed-hunger-for-more-focus-on-contemporary-art/" target="_blank">Forever Is Now exhibition </a>is returning to the Giza Plateau in <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/tags/egypt/" target="_blank">Egypt</a> for a second time. The modern art show will run from October 27 to November 30, with works by Tunisian-French artist eL Seed, French artist JR, Egyptian artist Ahmed Karaly and British-American sculptor Natalie Clark. For the first exhibition, held last October, the Giza Plateau was filled with large-scale installations and other kinds of artworks by a number of local, regional and international artists. It was visited by 500,000 people during its three-week run and was streamed live by more than one billion people on social media. Organiser Art D’Egypte is keen to rekindle its co-operation with Egypt's ministries of foreign affairs and tourism, and antiquities for the second show. Officials from both ministries lauded Forever Is Now as an effective means of increasing Egypt’s presence on the global stage and highlighting its pharaonic relics in a press conference on Tuesday. They promised the second exhibition would receive the government's full support. The artworks presented the first time around were created with various forms of media and most <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/arts-culture/2021/10/22/the-10-massive-artworks-on-display-at-the-pyramids-of-giza/" target="_blank">incorporated the</a><a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/arts-culture/2021/10/22/the-10-massive-artworks-on-display-at-the-pyramids-of-giza/" target="_blank"> landscape of </a><a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/arts-culture/2021/10/22/the-10-massive-artworks-on-display-at-the-pyramids-of-giza/" target="_blank">Giza</a> into the viewer’s experience. French artist JR is returning this year; his contribution to the 2021 event included a piece featuring a hand holding a postcard, which, when viewed from a certain angle, gave the illusion that the top of the Great Pyramid was levitating. The first Forever Is Now show was visited by a host of A-list names, including US singer Pharrell Williams and French actress Isabelle Adjani. Art D'Egypte is a privately owned Egyptian company, founded by curator Nadine Abdel Ghaffar. It has made a name for itself hosting contemporary art shows in historical spaces in Cairo, with previous locations including The Egyptian Museum in Tahrir Square and Al Moez Street in Old Cairo.