Ibouyen works with dreams, symbols, and Amazigh language—knowledge misrepresented and erased by the outside world.
His practice centers on shadow, dreams, and color, exploring imagery drawn from the unconscious. Forms and signs engage with memory and intuition. Blue holds a central place—not color, but protection and depth, a spiritual dimension.
His work exists in suspension, occupying thresholds.
It suspends the moment between opposing forces that need each other: feminine and masculine, moon and sun, wound and weapon.
It suspends the liminal space between sleep and waking, between symbol and language, between what emerges from the unconscious and what clarity will reshape.