Curatorial Projects

My curatorial practice unfolds as a situated process shaped by place, material, and collective engagement. I work with exhibitions as temporary structures of attention, emerging through dialogue, experimentation, and close reading of context rather than predefined frameworks.

Rooted in Hebron and its surrounding geographies, this practice engages with informal sites—caves, streets, walls, and community spaces—allowing the site itself to guide curatorial decisions. Workshops, conversations, and collective processes form the core of this work, with traces of participation becoming part of the curatorial form.

Archives and memory operate as active presences, informing how projects gather fragmented histories and multiple temporalities into shared spatial configurations. Through this approach, curating functions as a mode of inquiry and care, attentive to lived conditions and open to diverse readings.

Below is a selection of curatorial projects.