Izz Al Jabari is a Palestinian curator, multidisciplinary artist, and cultural researcher whose work explores the fragile space between memory, land, and collective experience. Rooted in Hebron, his practice examines how archives, indigenous knowledge, and systems of control shape the ways communities remember, forget, and narrate their worlds.

Working across installation, photography, natural materials, and long-term research projects, Izz investigates the tension between preservation and erasure—particularly in contexts marked by colonial fragmentation, surveillance, and forced transformation. His artistic language moves between the material and the metaphysical, treating memory as both a wound and a site of reconstruction.

In addition to his artistic practice, Izz serves as a cultural manager and researcher engaged in community-oriented projects, archival preservation, and critical design methodologies. He is the founder of the Mandaloun Experimental Arts Lab in Hebron, an informal platform dedicated to experimental, decolonial, and locally rooted artistic practices. He also manages one of Palestine’s largest photographic archives, working to make its narratives accessible to artists, researchers, and the public.

Across exhibitions, workshops, and research-based projects, Izz’s work seeks to reopen suppressed narratives, create spaces for dialogue, and explore how memory can become a form of resistance and a vessel for imagining new futures.