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    Michèle Cade Khelifi: Between What’s Revealed and What’s Held Close

    Junaynah El Guthmy

    Michèle Cade Khelifi creates art that reveals the hidden layers of emotion

    In the heart of Dubai, Michèle Cade Khelifi’s studio hums with ink, texture, and the quiet energy of creation. Her work moves between revealing and concealing, a reflection of emotion, memory, and the delicate threads that bind them.

    “I grew up in London in a household full of color, music, and making things by hand,” Cade Khelifi recalls. Her father printed silkscreens for Vivienne Westwood, while her Uruguayan mother brought warmth and a fiery energy to everyday life. Art, she says, was always the language she spoke best.

    Michèle Cade Khelifi

    After studying graphic design at Central Saint Martins, she felt the pull toward something more tactile and intuitive. “Working on a computer removed the human side of things. I missed the mess, the movement, the mistakes,” she explains. The birth of her third child became the turning point, and Cade Khelifi embraced fine art as her true path.

    Her most personal works emerge from emotion itself. “One piece came from grief. I wasn’t trying to explain anything I just needed to let something out. Over time, I realized it was about revealing and concealing at the same time.”

    Cade Khelifi favors raw, lived-in surfaces unprimed cotton, recycled wood, palm board paired with inks and water-based pigments that react unpredictably. Her process is physical, layered, and cyclical: a reflection of how humans carry emotion and memory.

    Living in the Arab world has shaped her approach profoundly. “Dubai is constantly moving forward, yet deeply rooted in tradition. That contrast feeds my work the tension between progress and memory.” She draws inspiration from poetry, symbolism, and calligraphy, finding in restraint and subtlety a way to express emotion without words.

    For Cade Khelifi, art is more than creation; it is release. “It gives emotions somewhere to go without being judged. It allows stories to be acknowledged and then gently let go.” In a world that rushes forward, her work offers a pause a quiet space to reflect, feel, and connect.

    “Nothing feels fixed. It reflects how we carry emotion and memory.”

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