Alaa Ayman
Alaa Ayman (b. 1995, Cairo) is a painter and video artist whose practice investigates memory as a constructed image rather than a fixed document. Working primarily in oil, she develops layered compositions through processes of addition, erasure, and blurring, allowing figures and spaces to oscillate between presence and disappearance.
A graduate of the Faculty of Fine Arts (2018), she further pursued studies in Visual Arts at Studio Khana for Contemporary Art and Cultural Development in Cairo. This dual formation informs a practice grounded in painterly experimentation and conceptual inquiry.
Central to Ayman’s work is her engagement with personal archives and found materials old photographs, letters, tapes, and negatives which she collects and reinterprets. Drawn to the tonal qualities of vintage film, amateur lighting, and informal gestures, she reconstructs fragments of memory into newly imagined narratives. Her paintings do not attempt to preserve the past; instead, they recompose it, weaving personal mythology with broader historical and collective memory.
Human relationships remain at the core of her inquiry. Through attentive observation and intimate storytelling, Ayman transforms everyday moments into suspended, atmospheric scenes where identity feels both familiar and elusive.
By treating the painted surface as a site of accumulation and revision, Ayman positions memory as fluid constantly rewritten through gesture, pigment, and time.
