Docs

2023 Graduation Collection:
Jameel House of Traditional Arts in Cairo

At the Jameel House of Traditional Arts in Cairo, we immerse ourselves in the rich heritage of traditional arts, challenging ourselves to create original designs using timeless techniques. Since its inception in 2009, this collaborative programme between the Egyptian Ministry of Culture, The Prince’s Foundation School of Traditional Arts and Community Jameel has trained over 200 artists and artisans. Many graduates are now building their own businesses, contributing to Egypt’s evolving art scene.


We continually enhance our curriculum, introducing intricate geometric and floral patterns, new craft techniques and a stronger focus on design. This year, students embraced exciting challenges, such as the cuerda seca technique in ceramics, and created impressive projects, like Hany El Deeb’s curvilinear wood panel and Mariam Anwar’s tempera painting. New materials, like stone, were also explored, with Aya Soliman’s stone bench being a standout achievement.


Our programme fosters creativity and craftsmanship, and we look forward to welcoming new students into this inspiring journey, hoping to further enrich Egypt’s artistic legacy.


Mamdouh Sakr

Programme Manager


The Jameel House of Traditional Arts in Cairo

Amira Negm

Amera Negm

Panel

120 x 70 cm

This window façade decoration is inspired by Istanbul’s Süleymaniye Mosque, the city’s second oldest royal mosque. The cuerda seca or dry rope technique was employed in this project, where glazes are separated using an isolating line composed of oil, manganese and a transparent substance. Drawing with the isolating line prevents the glazes from mixing, and six primary colours were used: red, blue, green, ochre, turquoise and white.

Amera Negm

Plate

Featuring a gazelle surrounded by botanical motifs, this design was created using the metallic lustre technique that relies on the density of smoke during the firing process.

Amira Khaled

Amira Khaled - Three of Life

Tree of Life

105 x 67.5 cm

Crafted from 28 hand-painted tiles using oxides and underglaze technique, this panel is inspired by the tree of life story. Drawing from traditional Islamic motifs, it showcases bulut, rumi, stylised flowers and animals as seen in the Topkapı Palace.

Heba Amin

Heba Amin - Brass box

Brass Box

16 x 21 cm

Inspired by Mamluk era food storage systems, this brass box features pen engravings used to create an hexagonal grid to distribute plant elements and combine quadrilateral geometric decorations.

Amira Mohamed

Amira Mohammed - Plate

Plate

35 cm

Inspired by 10th century Persian crafts, this ceramic has black, yellow, red and green colours under a clear glaze. It is decorated with delicate drawings containing birds, animals, floral and plant decorations, and Kufic letters, with black, yellow, red and green colours under a clear glaze.


The drawings reflect the region of Nishapur and the range of festivals celebrated by Muslims and Zoroastrians, and also depict Christian symbols, giving it a character full of life and different stories.

Amira Mohammed - Panel

Panel

Inspired by the Bibi Khanum Mosque dating to 1398 and 1405 in Samarkand, the design of this panel incorporates plain tiles alongside tiles adorned with botanical motifs. The fundamental structure is based on the ten-point star polygon, five-pointed star polygon, eight-pointed star polygon and the relations between them. Clay slabs were crafted and manually cut, then left to dry before undergoing the initial firing process. Then, plain tiles were sprayed with a colour resembling natural beige rock hues. For the tiles with botanical motifs, the cuerda seca technique was employed to separate different glaze colours. Finally, a second and final firing took place, followed by assembling to achieve the final form.

Aya Soliman

Aya Soliman - Bench

Bench

125 x 60 cm

This outdoor bench made of Hashemite stone is inspired by a Coptic-style ivory box that tells the story of a hero fighting enemies, with an engraving of a mythical winged animal on the side in the same Coptic style. Hashemite stone is distinguished by its unique yellow colour, hardness and resistance to external weather factors.

Hany El Deeb

Amira Mohammed - Plate

Panel

80 x 80 cm

The first of its kind in Egypt, this project is inspired by the feather of Al-Ghamri’s pulpit located in the al-Ashraf Barsbay Khanqa in the Desert of the Mamluks in Cairo.


Made of mahogany wood inlaid with ebony and brass work, it uses the zincograph technique.

Manal Yosri

Manal Yosri - Panel

Panel

120 x 35 cm

Inspired by the tiles found on a 17th century balcony entryway at the Shrine of Fatima Al-Masumeh in Qom, Iran, this design utilises a network of hexagonal geometric shapes, known as tasomah, intertwined with botanical decorations.

Lamia Ismail

Lamia Ismael - Panel

Panel

110 x 58 cm

Inspired by the Gayer Anderson Museum fountain floor, this panel uses an hexagonal grid and repetitive triangles to form the dodecagon shape. The triangle unit was carved on gypsum to create the tile mould.

Amira Mohammed - Plate #1
Amira Mohammed - Plate #2

Ibrahim Waheed

Aya Soliman - Bench

Bench

119 x 65 cm

Inspired by ancient Quranic benches, this bench features wood inlay using camel bones as geometric decorations inspired by the Wikala of Sultan Qaytbay. Woodturning was used to build the frame, and the lower portion is intended as a storage unit.

Mohamed ElShamy

Mohamed ElShamy - Panel

Panel

90 x 60 cm

A ceramic panel inspired by Al-Aqsa Mosque and made using the cuerda seca technique.

Mariam Anwar

Mariam Anwar - Frame

Frame

This wooden frame for a door is inspired by a wall mural found in the Topkapı Palace in Istanbul. The concept is rooted in the Bauhinia tree, particularly inspired by the vibrancy of its leaves and blossoms.

Nada Al Morshidy

Nada ElMorshidy - Panel

Panel

128 x 44 cm

A ceramic panel of tiles engraved with motifs from the Ibn Tulun Mosque. The tiles were painted using a transparent glaze mixed with manganese to give a stone feel.

Nada Kadri

Nada Kadri - Panel

Panel

100 x 60 cm

Inspired by the Taj Mahal, this panel incorporates various styles and design techniques, such as arch shapes, marble works and stone carvings, to achieve a Mughal look.

Nada Kadri - Plate

Plate

35 cm

Inspired by an elegant 16th century plate based on two geometric networks, the design uses the same quadrilateral and pentagonal formations and is decorated using brush painting.

Nourhane Elkady

Nourhane ElKady - Lighting unit

Lighting unit

28 cm front circle / 68 cm rear circle

This hand-engraved brass lighting unit is inspired by the two Mamluk era sconces exhibited at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.


The large platter is part of a set of trays upon which, traditionally, candlesticks were fixed to reflect candlelight, illuminating a room while higlighting the decorative details of the brass surface.


The project follows octagonal shape proportions, relying on a circular network of 21 solar motifs, featuring musicians, dancers and animals.

Omnia Hosni

Omnia Hosni - Mirror

Mirror

63 x 63 cm

This hand-carved wooden mirror frame is a depiction of a hunting and harvesting scene. It contains oud players, hunters with their horses, various birds and bunches of grapes. The piece is inspired by a mirror from the Fatimid era exhibited at the Pergamon Museum in Berlin.

Tuka El Safty

Tuka El Safty- Panel

Panel

90 x 45 cm

This ceramic panel uses pigments and oxides similar to those used to decorate the Shah-i-Zinda Mausoleum in Samarkand, Uzbekistan. Blue and turquoise have been combined with yellow ochre, green and black to achieve a unique floral motif.

Tuka El Safty - Vase

Vase

Inspired by 13th century Ayyubid era crafts, this round, plump body holds a slender neck and is decorated with black dye under a turquoise glaze. Traditionally, this type of vase was used to store and transport spices, food ingredients and medical materials.

2023 Graduating Class

Jameel House of Traditional Arts in Cairo Graduating Class 2023
The 2023 graduating class of the Jameel House of Traditional Arts in Cairo at the graduation ceremony. Left to right: front row, Heba Amin*, Amira Mohamed*, Amira Khaled*, Manal Yosri*, Nada Al Morshidy*, Tuka El Safty*, Nada Kadri*, Alya Gamal; middle row, Amira Negm*, Aya Soliman*, Mariam Anwar*, Omnia Hosni*, Lamia Ismail*, Hany El Deeb*; back row, Mohamed ElShamy*, Ibrahim Waheed*, Ola Said, Basma Hamed, Dr Mamdouh Sakr, Delfina Bottesini, Dr Khaled Azzam, Mostafa Awad, Nagat Farouk, Cléa Daridan. (* Denotes graduating students.)

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