Hanan FouadHanan Fouad is an Associate Professor at the Faculty of Fine Arts, Helwan University, and currently serves as a Lecturer at the Faculty of Arts and Design Technology, El Sewedy University of Technology. She earned her Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) in Graphic Design from the Faculty of Fine Arts, Helwan University in 2009, where she also completed her Master’s degree (2014) and Ph.D. (2020). Hanan has exhibited her work internationally, including “Egypt the Cradle of Art” organized by Imago Mundi in Italy (2014) and the “International Watercolor Biennale” in Fabriano, Italy (2014). Locally, she has participated in numerous collective exhibitions such as “Contemporary Egyptian Graphic Art” (2015). She has held four solo exhibitions in 2019, 2022, 2023, and 2025, and received multiple honors, including the Youth Salon Award (23rd Edition, 2012) for her installation “I Am Just a Human”, as well as the International Honorary Prize at the 6th Egypt International Print Triennial, held at the Palace of Art, Cairo Opera House (2025
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In this series of lithographs, Hanan Fouad masterfully constructs a world where the physical and the metaphorical collide. The central motif—a large, patterned textile that appears both like a traditional head covering and a protective vessel—serves as a powerful symbol of cultural identity and heritage.
The first composition features a solitary silhouette flying a kite beneath a looming, levitating form. The kite, a universal symbol of hope and freedom, creates a delicate tether between the small figure and the vast, stippled sky. In the second work, the perspective shifts; a child sits atop the massive, stone-like texture of the textile, tethering their kite to the horizon. The inclusion of a small, resilient plant emerging from the rocky foreground suggests a narrative of growth in unlikely places.
Fouad’s use of the lithographic process is exceptionally sophisticated. She creates a "lunar" landscape through varied graining and ink washes, giving the ground a tactile, parched quality. The high contrast between the deep blacks of the birds and the ethereal greys of the atmosphere imbues the scenes with a sense of "longing." These works do not depict a specific place, but rather the feeling of home—carried, lost, and reimagined through the eyes of a child.