As a multidisciplinary artist, my work is guided by a desire to explore the emotional and spiritual dimensions of human experience and preserve stories that risk being forgotten, whether personal, cultural, or collective. My work moves fluidly between illustration, video, installation, and filmmaking, allowing me to approach each concept through the medium that best embodies its essence.
Much of my work reflects my experience as a Syrian-American, focusing on the spiritual and emotional landscapes of diaspora. Through conceptual experimentation, I explore how art can function as both archive and act of healing: a way to preserve what conflict and distance threaten to erase. I see art as a form of advocacy, healing, and connection. From video installations centering Palestine and collective resistance, to more intimate visual meditations on prayer, memory, and the motherland, I see my practice as an ongoing dialogue between grief and hope. My process often begins with reflection, listening, documenting, and re-imagining; and evolves into forms that invite others to do the same.
Ultimately, my work aims to hold space for transforming personal narratives into shared moments of understanding. I want my art to feel like a conversation between worlds; one that connects people through empathy and the universal human experience.