1981 | Giza | Egypt
“In my work, I defend the beauty of emotion, the dignity of sensitivity, and the silent revolution of the feminine soul.
I honor vulnerability as strength and sensitivity as intelligence.”
Creating art has always brought a sense of balance and calm into Amin’s life. Born and raised in Cairo, Egypt, she was immersed in a rich cultural heritage and history that shaped her sensitivity to beauty, emotion, and human connection.
Amin’s work reflects the female experience—its resilience, tenderness, and complexity. Through poetic forms and symbolic narratives, the artist explores the quiet strength found in vulnerability and the grace contained within imperfection.
Her art weaves together personal memories, cultural echoes, and emotional truths into a universal language. Amin seeks to evoke empathy and reflection, inviting viewers to feel rather than simply see, and to enter into a dialogue that transcends boundaries of gender, culture, and identity.
Rasha Amin is a multidisciplinary artist based in Rome, Italy. She earned a degree in Fine Arts in Cairo, Egypt, where she was born and raised. In 2024, she completed a Master of Fine Arts (M.F.A.) at Rome Business School in Rome.
03-09 Feb 2026
Vernissage
Tuesday 03 Feb 18:30-21:30
A Room for Peace
The exhibition explores peace as an artistic response to the violence and chaos of war, using the natural world as a metaphor for refuge, renewal, and balance. The works on display investigate the intrinsic bond between humanity and nature, presenting hidden figures that embody vulnerability and resilience, blending harmoniously with the natural rhythms of our planet.
In this space suspended between stillness and mystery, the artworks invite viewers to reflect on moments of chaos and on the artist’s desire to embrace harmony and inner peace.
A Room for Peace is an immersive, multisensory art installation born from the visual and emotional language of the artist’s body of work. The installation takes shape as an abstract, meditative environment composed of images, patterns, and textures derived from paintings, drawings, and visual fragments developed in response to unstable inner landscapes and to a global reality marked by conflict, anxiety, and overstimulation.
This space invites participants to enter a metaphorical refuge: a zone for contemplation and silent reflection, far removed from the disorienting experience of conflict and the overload of information. The work offers a sanctuary in which to process emotional responses to the confusion and violence of war, both in a literal and psychological sense.
A Room for Peace proposes an intimate and deeply meaningful emotional experience, bringing contemporary art into dialogue with immersive media and raising an urgent question: how can we rediscover a sense of balance in an age of chaos?