Lately, I’ve been experiencing a very strange and beautiful feeling… seeing my artworks suddenly appear in the streets of Amman on large outdoor screens with Seagulls Media.

It’s honestly hard to describe what it feels like to create something quietly in the studio — surrounded by paint, thoughts, silence, and long hours — and then unexpectedly find it becoming part of the city, moving among people, lights, streets, and everyday moments.

I’ve always felt that art shouldn’t only live inside homes or gallery walls. Sometimes it should exist outside too, where anyone can encounter it for a few unexpected seconds during their day. A small visual pause. A feeling. A memory. A color that stays with someone.

There is something very meaningful to me about making art accessible to everyone, even in the middle of traffic, movement, and ordinary life.
Maybe this is what I love most about public art — the idea that a painting can quietly become part of someone’s ordinary day.
Not everyone enters a gallery, but everyone walks through a city. And sometimes, a single image, color, or moment of stillness can unexpectedly meet someone exactly when they need it.
For me, seeing these works move beyond the studio and into the streets of Amman feels less like an advertisement, and more like a conversation between art and everyday life.
Thanks to Seagulls Media and artcrush gallery for this opportunity.