Laila Ajjawi (Arabic: ليلى عجاوي, born June 9, 1990[1]) is an activist, graffiti artist, muralist, and digital artist based in Jordan.[1] She is of Palestinian descent, and was born and raised in a Palestinian refugee camp outside of Irbid, Jordan. Her work[2] highlights women living in the Middle East, with a focus on refugees facing discrimination and limited resources in their countries of residence. She has created murals with Women on Walls, a public art project based in Egypt aimed at empowering women through street art.

Early life and education

Ajjawi was born in a Palestinian refugee camp outside of Irbid, Jordan. She is the oldest of six children, and her father is a construction worker. Her family built their house on the site where her paternal grandparents resettled during the Nakba. While her family has cultural ties to Jenin, both of Laila's parents were born and raised in refugee camps.[1]

Ajjawi attended Yarmouk University and studied biomedical physics.[1][2]

Career

Ajjawi's primary source of income comes from the humanitarian sector, and she has worked as a site supervisor in a refugee camp.[1][3] She took the humanitarian route as a response to the Syrian crisis, saying her work with Syrian refugees has widened her knowledge of "social life and humanity."[3]

Ajjawi's art highlights issues such as gender-based violence, a lack of women's representation in the workforce, and the ongoing discrimination of Palestinian refugees. She paints murals of strong women, as a means to show other women and refugees that they can take control of their lives, despite legal and social opposition.[1][3]

Ajjawi has accumulated numerous awards for her art, writing, and short film.[1] One notable work is her 2014 mural Look At My Mind, which she created as part of the Women on Walls project.[1][2][3]

Ajjawi has partnered with other leaders that focus on women's empowerment as well. In 2015, she painted a mural for SheFighter, Lina Khalifeh's women-only martial arts training studio in Amman, Jordan.[1]

A physicist by profession, she trains her peers, writes and deals with art. As an artist, she uses Colored- Pencils, Ink, Watercolors, Oil on canvas, and Digital art.[4]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Prachi, Gupta. "This Woman Is Using Graffiti to Change the Way Her Country Thinks About Girls: Laila Ajjawi is determined to make positive change within her impoverished community". Cosmopolitan. Retrieved December 15, 2015.
  2. 1 2 3 Froelich, Paula. "Women's rights, ISIS, and freedom: Jordanian street art expresses its frustration". NY Post.
  3. 1 2 3 4 Jordanian graffiti artist
  4. Biographical data-Womenonwalls.org


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.