Elias Ayoub
Elias Ayoub (b. 1986, Damascus) is a Syrian painter whose practice navigates the tension between expressive figuration and spatial abstraction. His work situates the human figure within landscapes that oscillate between the tangible and the imagined, constructing emotional terrains where memory, identity, and relational intimacy unfold.
A graduate of the Faculty of Fine Arts, Damascus University (Painting Department), Ayoub later completed a Master’s degree at Kursk State University, Russia, and is currently pursuing a PhD in the History and Philosophy of Art at the Surikov Art Institute in Moscow. This academic trajectory informs a practice grounded in both formal inquiry and conceptual reflection.
Ayoub’s paintings move fluidly between organic, flowing forms and angular, geometric constructions. At times, the surface is dominated by expansive abstract fields; at others, it is structured through architectural fragmentation. This coexistence of softness and structure defines his visual language. Expressive color plays a central role often emotive and saturated yet controlled within carefully constructed compositions.
Recurring themes include Arab urban landscapes, motherhood, intimate human relationships, and the nude figure. These subjects are not treated descriptively, but symbolically. The city becomes a psychological space; the body becomes a carrier of vulnerability and continuity. Rather than illustrating narrative, Ayoub constructs atmospheres where figures appear suspended between presence and introspection.
His work has been exhibited across the Middle East and Europe, including presentations at Beirut Art Fair, the Dubrovnik City Museum (Croatia), and the Museum of Contemporary Art in Rostov-on-Don, Russia. His paintings are held in public and private collections internationally.
Through the synthesis of expressive figuration and abstract spatial systems, Ayoub positions painting as a site of negotiation between heritage and modernity, structure and emotion, the lived and the imagined.