About
Musya Qeburia (b. 1991, Poti, Georgia) is a multidisciplinary Georgian artist based in Tbilisi. Emerging from the early street art movement in Georgia, she began painting walls in 2008 and has since become one of the country’s most recognized contemporary muralists. Over the years of practice, Musya has developed a visual language that blends intuition, cultural symbolism and the raw emotional honesty of lived experience. Her work explores human identity, history, culture and the invisible patterns that shape our inner worlds. Moving fluidly between large-scale murals, canvas, digital works and experimental mixed media, Musya approaches each surface as a site of storytelling—bridging the personal and the collective. She built her artistic foundation across multiple creative fields including publishing, advertising, and design. This multidirectional experience continues to inform the versatility and depth of her practice. Musya’s breakthrough came with her internationally acclaimed project “Series of the Lips” (2012), a collection of fifteen paintings capturing intimate, symbolic portraits of women’s lips. The series gained global attention, with works sold in the USA and Germany and was nominated among the Top 13 artworks selected from over 300 entries. It was exhibited at Art Basel Miami and the Curioos x Affordable Art Fair in New York (2016). She has held several solo exhibitions in Georgia and participated in various international art festivals and cultural programs, including Kulturnetzwerk UW Etzdorf , Kharkiv Smart Fest, Batumi Backyard Stories, Our Voices From the Spray Cans (Norway), Artisterium, Niko Movement, Tbilisi Mural Festival and others. Her murals appear in both interior and exterior environments and she has collaborated with leading Georgian and global companies, including Porsche, Seletti, Booking.com, Amazon, European Union, UNICEF, McDonald’s, Eastern Partnership, BOG, TBC and much more. Today, Musya continues expanding her practice into canvas art, digital forms, installations and community-based creative projects. Her current direction focuses on personal and collective healing, unconscious patterns and the relationship between art, emotion and transformation. Alongside her artistic career, she aims to amplify Georgia on the global street art map and address themes such as social justice, ecology, equality, and psychological evolution.