Amjad Altayyar
Amjad Altayyar is an Iraqi-born artist whose practice explores solitude as a psychological and symbolic condition. Trained at the University of Baghdad (BFA, 1996) and later completing postgraduate studies in Fine Arts and Education in Europe, Altayyar’s work reflects a life shaped between geographies where memory, migration, and introspection quietly intersect.
Central to his visual language are soft-featured figures often children or young adolescents whose wide-set eyes carry a depth of interior contemplation. These figures do not confront the viewer; rather, they inhabit states of inward absorption. Their presence generates a subtle tension between vulnerability and awareness, inviting empathy without sentimentality.
Recurring objects birds, dolls, flowers, apples, domestic vessels function as symbolic companions. They are not decorative elements, but extensions of the figures’ inner worlds. Through these poetic associations, Altayyar constructs scenes of gentle union between human and object, suggesting identification, protection, or quiet dialogue. The intimacy of these pairings transforms stillness into narrative.
His restrained palette marked by tonal economy and chromatic austerity reinforces the contemplative atmosphere of the work. Color operates sparingly, structuring space without spectacle. The compositions appear suspended in a quiet ritual, where melancholy is present yet weightless an understated sadness that hovers rather than settles.
Altayyar has presented solo exhibitions in Iraq, Sweden, and Bahrain, and has participated in international exhibitions since the early 1990s. His works are included in permanent collections within Swedish municipal and regional institutions, including Norrköping, Örebro, Katrineholm, and the Östergötland and Södermanland regional councils.
Through quiet figuration and symbolic reduction, Altayyar positions innocence not as naivety, but as a lens one through which isolation, tenderness, and the fragile architecture of belonging are made visible.