Advertisement · 728 × 90
#
Hashtag
#palestinianart
Advertisement · 728 × 90
Three Palestinian women occupy a flattened, glowing interior of rose pink, brown, red, green, black, and white. Two sit behind a dark wooden table, while a third (in a red chair in the foreground with her back toward us) looks over one shoulder at us. Each has dark hair parted near the center, large almond eyes, and calm expressions. The woman at left folds her arms across her chest. She wears a black dress with rose and coral sleeves patterned with triangles, a broad white collar, and round pale earrings. The woman at right wears a vivid green dress whose sleeves and shoulders are filled with small symbols like an eye, birds, crescent shapes, a hand, a ladder, and a tiny house. On the table sit two tulip-shaped glasses of red tea and a shallow silver bowl with a white dove. The woman closest to us wears a black garment covered in fine white ornamental lines. Her turned pose makes her seem alert and watchful.

Palestinian artist Malak Mattar centers women as carriers of memory, resilience, and cultural continuity, and this painting turns an ordinary gathering into a symbolic field of Palestinian life. The tea glasses suggest hospitality and conversation while the dove invokes peace, longing, and fragile safety. The tiny motifs on the green dress seem like a stitched archive of home, land, protection, and survival. The triangular sleeve pattern also recalls the geometry of Tatreez and other regional textiles without becoming literal illustration. 

Born in Gaza in 1999, Mattar began painting in 2014, when art became a way to process fear and insist on life. By the time this work was shown in the 2020 exhibition “Art of Palestinian Women in Washington,” she was a young artist already known for bold color, simplified forms, and portraits that hold grief and dignity together. Here, the three women feel like a collective presence presenting women as witnesses, companions, and bearers of a future still imagined through beauty, ritual, and steadfastness.

Three Palestinian women occupy a flattened, glowing interior of rose pink, brown, red, green, black, and white. Two sit behind a dark wooden table, while a third (in a red chair in the foreground with her back toward us) looks over one shoulder at us. Each has dark hair parted near the center, large almond eyes, and calm expressions. The woman at left folds her arms across her chest. She wears a black dress with rose and coral sleeves patterned with triangles, a broad white collar, and round pale earrings. The woman at right wears a vivid green dress whose sleeves and shoulders are filled with small symbols like an eye, birds, crescent shapes, a hand, a ladder, and a tiny house. On the table sit two tulip-shaped glasses of red tea and a shallow silver bowl with a white dove. The woman closest to us wears a black garment covered in fine white ornamental lines. Her turned pose makes her seem alert and watchful. Palestinian artist Malak Mattar centers women as carriers of memory, resilience, and cultural continuity, and this painting turns an ordinary gathering into a symbolic field of Palestinian life. The tea glasses suggest hospitality and conversation while the dove invokes peace, longing, and fragile safety. The tiny motifs on the green dress seem like a stitched archive of home, land, protection, and survival. The triangular sleeve pattern also recalls the geometry of Tatreez and other regional textiles without becoming literal illustration. Born in Gaza in 1999, Mattar began painting in 2014, when art became a way to process fear and insist on life. By the time this work was shown in the 2020 exhibition “Art of Palestinian Women in Washington,” she was a young artist already known for bold color, simplified forms, and portraits that hold grief and dignity together. Here, the three women feel like a collective presence presenting women as witnesses, companions, and bearers of a future still imagined through beauty, ritual, and steadfastness.

“Three Women” by ملك مطر Malak Mattar (Palestinian) - Acrylic on canvas / c. 2020 - Museum of the Palestinian People (Washington DC) #WomenInArt #WomensArt #WomanArtist #WomenArtists #MalakMattar #Mattar #PalestinianArt #PalestinianWomen #art #artText #PalestinianArtist #2020sArt #WomenPaintingWomen

42 4 0 1

Children die before they even learn what life is.
Men are killed trying to give life meaning.
And us?
We sit here…
Today is a holiday! Let’s go out for a walk.
- excerpt from Hijra!
from a Palestinian/Sudanese poet from Gaza- Ahmed Sarsour
#palestine #palestinianart #artisresistance #art

5 5 0 0
Post image

Mural inside restroom of a Palestinian restaurant Mintish in Seattle #mural #muralart #art #dove #peace #olivebranch #palestine #freepalestine #palestinian #palestinianart 🍉🇵🇸

13 1 0 0
Post image

"One of the last paintings by artist Maher Naji. Acrylic on canvas 100/75 cm
Original ( available)"
#palestine #irinanajiart #palestinianheritage #palestinianart #freegaza #palestinianwomen #art #kunst #kunstwerk #genocide #war #hunger #hunger#palestinianchildren#artmahernaji#

5 1 0 0
Post image

Read Shareef’s profile: artistsatriskconnection.org/story/sharee...

Image credit: "Jerusalem." Courtesy of the artist. 5/5

#palestinianvoices #palestinianart #Gaza #Palestine

3 0 0 0
A triptych painting shows three elongated yellow-ochre faces with strong black outlines and blue lips, set against deep purple and gray backgrounds. The central face faces forward with heavy, arched brows and wide eyes looking to our right. On the left, a tilted head gazes sideways, eyes open also looking right with a somber expression. On the right, another tilted head rests with eyes closed, suggesting rest or resignation. All three figures have long, thin necks and bare shoulders, their repetition possibly evoking struggle, reflection, and resilience.

The Palestinian artist, Rawand Abuhilal, born in Jerusalem in 1991 and educated in art at Al-Quds University, uses her practice to respond to war, injustice, and displacement. This triptych presents three stylized female heads emerging from dark backgrounds. Their ochre faces, outlined in bold lines with blue lips and brows, shift from sideways tension to frontal confrontation to quiet repose. The series is said to embody the oscillation between anguish, survival, and renewal.

The artist links this work directly to the legacy of the Nakba—the “catastrophe” of 1948, when over 700,000 Palestinians were displaced from their homes during the creation of the State of Israel, and whose effects continue to reverberate across generations. 

Abuhilal reflected: “It used to be that I saw nothing in the Nakba but fear, misery, and darkness. I struggled to let go, but time had turned my heart black and pulled me deeper into the abyss. I wondered how it was possible to live freely with this dark weight inside me. But now the rising sun reminds me that life begins anew every day and it shines across my heart and gives me hope that I shall one day return to Palestine, my beloved home.”

By placing us before this cycle of despair and hope, Abuhilal transforms personal memory into universal testimony: hope, even fragile, becomes stronger than misery.

A triptych painting shows three elongated yellow-ochre faces with strong black outlines and blue lips, set against deep purple and gray backgrounds. The central face faces forward with heavy, arched brows and wide eyes looking to our right. On the left, a tilted head gazes sideways, eyes open also looking right with a somber expression. On the right, another tilted head rests with eyes closed, suggesting rest or resignation. All three figures have long, thin necks and bare shoulders, their repetition possibly evoking struggle, reflection, and resilience. The Palestinian artist, Rawand Abuhilal, born in Jerusalem in 1991 and educated in art at Al-Quds University, uses her practice to respond to war, injustice, and displacement. This triptych presents three stylized female heads emerging from dark backgrounds. Their ochre faces, outlined in bold lines with blue lips and brows, shift from sideways tension to frontal confrontation to quiet repose. The series is said to embody the oscillation between anguish, survival, and renewal. The artist links this work directly to the legacy of the Nakba—the “catastrophe” of 1948, when over 700,000 Palestinians were displaced from their homes during the creation of the State of Israel, and whose effects continue to reverberate across generations. Abuhilal reflected: “It used to be that I saw nothing in the Nakba but fear, misery, and darkness. I struggled to let go, but time had turned my heart black and pulled me deeper into the abyss. I wondered how it was possible to live freely with this dark weight inside me. But now the rising sun reminds me that life begins anew every day and it shines across my heart and gives me hope that I shall one day return to Palestine, my beloved home.” By placing us before this cycle of despair and hope, Abuhilal transforms personal memory into universal testimony: hope, even fragile, becomes stronger than misery.

"Hope Is Stronger Than Misery" by Rawand Abuhilal (Palestinian) - Acrylic on canvas (unconfirmed) / 2016 - Museum of the Palestinian People (Washington DC) #WomenInArt #WomanArtist #art #PalestinianArt #artwork #WomensArt #PalestinianArtist #artText #WomenArtists #BlueskyArt #Palestinian #hope

42 8 2 0