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Home Files Women artists

Arts: The women who are shifting the lines

Olfa Belhassineby Olfa Belhassine
26 March 2026
Arts: The women who are shifting the lines

Undoubtedly, Mediterranean women artists—those who venture further than most—have raised new questions, provoked ruptures, and expanded the horizons of what’s possible. This feature sheds light on the bold, boundary-pushing approaches of some of them.

This post is also available in: Français (French) العربية (Arabic)

For centuries, women who created remained invisible in the grand narrative of History. Artists? They had to fight long and hard to claim that title—one that brought them closer to… the gods. Today, however, thanks to the work of feminist historians, this buried legacy is being revived. Long erased, their contributions are being reclaimed—such as in a recent Rome exhibition that traced the creative and personal journeys of 56 female painters who lived and worked in the Eternal City between the 16th and 19th centuries.

Those who dare to push even further—by embracing feminist perspectives in traditionally male domains, experimenting with new expressive forms, or adopting the female gaze—encounter steeper challenges. Yet it’s precisely this difficulty that makes their work so powerful. They expand the field of art and broaden the horizon of what is possible for women creators.

This new Medfeminiswiya feature highlights those who are shifting the lines. In Tunisia, for example, female DJs trained since 2017 by La Fabrique Art Studio are reshaping the electronic music scene, making it more inclusive. Further east in Egypt, a troupe of female whirling dervishes brings a bold innovation to dance and music along the Nile. Despite accusations of apostasy and even… freemasonry, these courageous performers remain committed to a spiritual path of self-transcendence and devotion.

Back in Tunisia, photographers Meriem Bouderbala and Hela Ammar use daring visual language to liberate women’s bodies from orientalist projections and social constraints. In Palestine, designer Inas Dajani founded the brand Slétåte, which offers accessories inspired by female genitalia—a cheeky yet subversive gesture that challenges taboos and invites conversations, even with men, around female sexuality.

From Syria to Turkey and now to Sweden, where she lives in exile, queer Syrian visual artist Sara Khayat walks through her melancholia—a yearning for her homeland and for a childhood marked by a silenced difference.

These artists—and many others—may not yet have overturned dominant representations. But they have undoubtedly unsettled long-held beliefs, especially patriarchal and misogynistic ones, prompting new questions and paving the way for transformative shifts.

Tags: Women artists
Olfa Belhassine

Olfa Belhassine

Olfa Belhassine is a Tunisian journalist who worked with the Tunisian daily “La Presse” since 1990. After the 2011 protests, her articles started appearing in “Libération”, “Le Monde” and “Courrier International”, a testament to her extensive experience as a journalist reporting from Tunisia during President Ben Ali's rule and after his fall. In 2013, Olfa was awarded the first journalism prize of the “Center of Arab Women” for her investigative work on customary marriage in Tunisia, published in “La Presse.” Olfa has also been corresponding since 2015 for the JusticeInfo.net, a website specializing in transitional justice around the world. Olfa Belhassone and Hedia Barkat have published a book titled 'Ces nouveaux mots qui font la Tunisie' (These new words that make Tunisia), providing an in-depth exploration of the political transition in Tunisia after the revolution.

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