Inside the Multifaceted Practice of Egyptian Artist Nadine Khalifa
Egyptian artist and designer Nadine Khalifa works across painting, sculpture, furniture, and mosaics, building a contemporary practice that blends fine art with functional design.
Egyptian artist and designer Nadine Khalifa is building a multidisciplinary practice through 'Nadine Khalifa Designs', spanning painting, sculpture, furniture, and mosaics. Her recent work focuses on reinterpreting mosaics, a medium often associated with classical styles, through a contemporary visual language rooted in colour, movement and joy. What sets Khalifa’s practice apart is her ability to transform two-dimensional paintings into expressive sculptural works, bringing her characters and compositions to life into physical space. Her work sits between the intersection of art and functional design.

Nadine Khalifa's artistic period of experimentation began at university. “The first thing I started doing when I was in university was painting,” she explains. “When I graduated, because I had a lot of free time, I started to explore my art more.” This opened the door to sculpture, furniture, mosaics, and wider material exploration. However, her background in product design played a defining role in shaping her approach. Having studied furniture design at university, she always envisioned a practice that merged art with function. “I always wanted to put my touch in any product,” she says. “So, I thought, why not turn my art into furniture pieces?”

Rather than separating disciplines, Khalifa approaches each medium as a variation of the same artistic language. A painting can become a sculpture, and furniture can carry the same emotional quality as fine art. “I see the art piece, I take it exactly as it is and make a sculpture out of it,” she says. “I bring it to life.”
This openness to experimentation runs through every aspect of her work. Khalifa describes herself as someone constantly driven by curiosity and the desire to explore unfamiliar techniques. Even in painting, she avoids conventional methods, often incorporating unexpected materials to create texture and movement. “Sometimes I use strange things to paint with,” she explains. “For example, I use sugar in my paintings. I don’t know why I do it, but I like creating different textures.”

That same sense of playfulness extends into how she finds inspiration. Ideas can come from music, passing thoughts, or even a single line from a song. One of her sculptures, 'Matrahak Beqalbi', was inspired by the iconic song by Majida El Roumi.
Khalifa’s practice is centred around communicating joy. Her vibrant colour palettes, expressive figures, and playful compositions reflect both her personality and the emotional atmosphere she hopes to create through her work. “I love my art to spread happiness and joy, because this is my personality,” she says.
For Nadine Khalifa, art is deeply personal, and every piece carries emotional weight. “I feel like all my art pieces are my children,” she says. “Any piece that I sell, I have in my heart.” Among her most personal works is a mosaic piece titled The 'Apple of My Eye', inspired by the relationship she shares with her sister. The bird, which appears throughout much of her work, has become a recurring signature within her art. Representing Khalifa herself, it embodies freedom, movement, and unrestricted self-expression.

Today, Khalifa envisions establishing a brand entirely shaped by her artistic identity. Through ‘Nadine Khalifa Designs', her growing brand will hopefully extend across home decor, furniture, objects, and collectible pieces, carrying the same sense of joy that defines her work as a whole.
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