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Kevork Mourad: The Echoes of Silent Bells

May 12 – July 5, 2026

Kevork Mourad, Echoes in Stone, 2025

Kevork Mourad

Echoes in Stone, 2025

Acrylic on Cotton Fabric, Hand cut

38.42 x 33.34 x 1.91 cm

Kevork Mourad, Tower, 2019

Kevork Mourad

Tower, 2019

Acrylic on cotton fabric

250 x 160 x 160 cm

Kevork Mourad, The Alchemists’s Gate, 2026

Kevork Mourad

The Alchemists’s Gate, 2026

Ink and acrylic on cotton fabric and hand cut

42.5 x 60 cm

Kevork Mourad, Branching Out, 2022

Kevork Mourad

Branching Out, 2022

Acrylic on linen and hand cut

60.96 × 60.96 × 6.35 cm

Kevork Mourad, The Stitched Paths, 2025

Kevork Mourad

The Stitched Paths, 2025

Acrylic on recycled denim

73.66 cm

Kevork Mourad, The Waterfall, 2016

Kevork Mourad

The Waterfall, 2016

Acrylic on canvas

91 x 91 cm

Kevork Mourad, Afterlife II, 2024 

Kevork Mourad

Afterlife II, 2024 

110 x 110 cm

Kevork Mourad, Afterlife I, 2024

Kevork Mourad

Afterlife I, 2024

109 x 109 cm

Kevork Mourad, Into The Woods, 2024 

Kevork Mourad

Into The Woods, 2024 

Acrylic on cotton and hand-cut

47 x 48 cm

Kevork Mourad, The Conference of the Birds, 2026

Kevork Mourad

The Conference of the Birds, 2026

Acrylic on linen 

63 x 103 cm

Kevork Mourad, Tapestry of Memory, 2024 

Kevork Mourad

Tapestry of Memory, 2024 

Acrylic on cotton and hand-cut

60 x 120 cm

Kevork Mourad, Kalila wa Dimnah, 2026 

Kevork Mourad

Kalila wa Dimnah, 2026 

Acrylic on linen 

63 x 103 cm

Kevork Mourad, The Last prayer, 2025

Kevork Mourad

The Last prayer, 2025

Acrylic and ink on linen

53 x 56cm

Kevork Mourad, Resurrection, 2016

Kevork Mourad

Resurrection, 2016

Acrylic and Ink on linen

137 x 181 cm

Kevork Mourad, Contemplation, 2024

Kevork Mourad

Contemplation, 2024

Acrylic on linen 

123 x 183 cm

Kevork Mourad, The Silent Bells, 2025 

Kevork Mourad

The Silent Bells, 2025 

Acrylic and Ink on Denim

127 x 155 cm

Kevork Mourad, When Time Was Like a River, 2024 

Kevork Mourad

When Time Was Like a River, 2024 

Acrylic on cotton and handcut

134.5 x 218.5 x 10 cm

Kevork Mourad, After the Quake, 2019 

Kevork Mourad

After the Quake, 2019 

Acrylic and ink on paper

250 x 140 cm

Kevork Mourad, The Wave, 2025 

Kevork Mourad

The Wave, 2025 

Acrylic and ink on paper

270 x 140 cm

Kevork Mourad, Memories of the Stones, 2019 

Kevork Mourad

Memories of the Stones, 2019 

Installation, Diptych 

600 x 280 x 70 cm 

(each piece)

Press Release

Dubai, UAE – Leila Heller Gallery is pleased to present The Echoes of Silent Bells, a solo exhibition by Kevork Mourad. Opening in Dubai in May 2026, the exhibition brings together a new body of paintings, sculptural works, installations, and hand-cut compositions that reflect Kevork Mourad’s ongoing exploration of memory, displacement, cultural preservation, and the emotional architecture of history. Through layered visual narratives and intricate material processes, The Echoes of Silent Bells traces the fragile intersections between personal remembrance and collective cultural identity.

Born in Qameshli, Syria, and shaped by the cultural richness of Aleppo as well as his Armenian heritage, Kevork Mourad’s practice emerges from a deep engagement with histories that have been fractured, erased, or transformed by time and conflict. Working across painting, animation, performance, and installation, Mourad constructs visual worlds where architecture, figures, and landscapes dissolve into rhythmic lines and layered surfaces. His works function as both testimony and meditation—spaces where memory is preserved not as static documentation, but as living emotional experience.

In The Echoes of Silent Bells, Mourad reflects on the endurance of culture through fragmentation and reconstruction. Across monumental installations such as Memories of the Stones and Tower, alongside intimate works including The Last Prayer, Echoes in Stone, and The Silent Bells, the artist explores themes of absence, resilience, spirituality, and transformation. Architectural forms appear suspended between ruin and renewal, while human figures emerge and disappear within densely layered compositions that evoke the passage of time and the persistence of memory.

Central to Mourad’s practice is his unique visual language of line. Inspired by the musical traditions and oral histories of the Middle East and Armenia, his compositions unfold rhythmically across surfaces, often resembling musical notation or calligraphic movement. Through hand-cut canvases, layered textiles, recycled denim, and sculptural forms, Mourad expands painting into physical space, allowing shadows, voids, and negative space to become active elements within the work. These spatial interruptions suggest both loss and continuity—what remains visible and what lingers beyond sight.

The exhibition also highlights Mourad’s longstanding interest in storytelling as a communal and sensory act. Rather than presenting history through fixed narratives, his works invite viewers into immersive emotional landscapes shaped by memory, mythology, and imagination. Pieces such as Kalila wa Dimnah, The Conference of the Birds, and When Time Was Like a River reference literary, spiritual, and folkloric traditions while simultaneously addressing contemporary experiences of migration, exile, and cultural survival.

Throughout The Echoes of Silent Bells, Mourad considers art as a vessel for preserving endangered histories and intangible cultural memory. His layered compositions resist linear readings; instead, they propose memory as fragmented, fluid, and constantly reconstructed through personal and collective experience. In doing so, the exhibition reflects on the role of art in carrying histories forward—transforming silence, loss, and displacement into spaces of reflection and connection.

Immersive, poetic, and deeply resonant, The Echoes of Silent Bells continues Kevork Mourad’s broader artistic practice of bridging visual art, music, performance, and narrative. Here, memory becomes both material and gesture—an evolving language through which forgotten places, voices, and histories are reimagined for the present.