Norhan Khorshid
Norhan Khorshid (b. 1995, Egypt) is an Egyptian expressionist painter whose practice examines the body as a site of emotional tension and psychological exposure. A graduate of the Faculty of Applied Arts, Helwan University (Decorative Arts, 2019), Khorshid translates complex inner states into fluid visual environments that blur the boundaries between perception and reality.
Her paintings center on unstable, shifting figures bodies that appear suspended between presence and dissolution. Rather than fixed identities, these forms suggest psychological flux: vulnerability, alienation, tenderness, and quiet resistance. The human figure becomes less a subject than a vessel through which emotional states are made visible.
Khorshid situates her characters within ambiguous, dreamlike spaces. Color moves in soft yet charged transitions, dissolving structural certainty and amplifying emotional depth. Distortion and softness operate not as stylistic effects, but as language mechanisms through which fragility and instability are articulated. Surrounding elements function as extensions of the body’s interior condition, carrying tension without overt narrative.
Her work resists clarity in favor of sensation. The figures inhabit a threshold between intimacy and isolation, where exposure is neither theatrical nor decorative, but deeply human. In this suspended space, vulnerability becomes central not as weakness, but as a state of truth.
Khorshid has participated in exhibitions across Egypt and the Arab world and has received recognition including the Youth Salon Award for Drawing and First Prize at the Talae‘ competition.
Through expressive fluidity and psychological nuance, Khorshid positions painting as a space where the human condition is not defined, but felt where the body becomes the terrain upon which emotion is quietly revealed.
