My work explores uncertainty and fluidity as continuous conditions of existence, shaped by constant movement, displacement, and the ongoing renegotiation of identity. Growing up in Lebanon and later shifting from architecture to art taught me to navigate instability not as a limitation but as a space of possibility.
This fluidity extends into how I approach gender, ecology, and interspecies relations.
I inhabit a liminal space that refuses fixed delineations, not only between masculinity and femininity, but also between the human and the more-than-human world. Queerness, for me, is an ecological position, a way of challenging taxonomies that separate bodies, species, and ecosystems into rigid hierarchies.
Through painting, performance, video, and installation, I examine how identity materializes in gestures, objects, landscapes, and the body itself. My works often reconfigure fragments of selfhood, queer, Arab, non-binary, immigrant, alongside elements of the environment, questioning anthropocentric understandings of presence and coexistence.
My practice seeks to make visible what is fragile and fleeting: the porous boundaries between beings, the forms of care and dependence that sustain life, and the possibility of inhabiting the world not through domination, but through solidarity. By affirming vulnerability as a force, I aim to expand how bodies, human and otherwise, can appear and matter in the world.