About Jasmine Kahlia


Jasmine Kahlia is a unique trailblazer within the UK Arts Industry. She has contributed significantly to the UK Arts Industry since 2016 through her stunning visual exhibitions and installations and has brought through and paid hundreds of emerging artists along with her on her exhibitions and tours. 

Her most sought after piece to date "CRY L8R" sold in 2024 at £2250.

Her journey started in 2006 as a teenage grafitti artist and illustrator. Her distinctive work, which prominently features female faces and amplifies voices from iner-city London and Barcelona is instantly recognisable and striking.

Jasmine Kahlia does not just work within visual art. Her practise spans 19 art disicplines and she is well-known for her exquisite live-looping and her best-selling literature pieces - namely Evrythin is Temporary.

Many top UK Arts Institutions have purchased, currently hold or have archived Jasmine Kahlia's literature including: 


UAL, Wellcome Collection, BALTIC Gateshead, Manchester Metropolitan Uni, London Metropolitan Archives, Goldsmiths, INIVA, Sittingbourne Library, Sherwood Zine Library [USA] and many more.


She has built a solid network of artists and creatives in both cities London and Barcelona through many projects, but in 2025 finally focused on building all of her own platforms from scratch. 

She's singlehandedly built sportswear store and arts blog ALVÄ Apparel, artwork store Bluprinta and her own artist page Jasmine Kahlia, daily showing her community of 850 subscribers that it is possible to harness cross industry skills like finance, tech and AI to create her own solid platforms and make money within the Arts industry.

She often talks about + demystifies Finance and AI within the Arts industry and openly campaigns for more transparency and less financial exploitation between arts companies and creators.

Jasmine Kahlia has made sure to archive her literature work across many large arts institutions like Wellcome Collection, INIVA, Manchester Metropolitan University, London Metropolitan Archives, BALTIC Gateshead and UAL to name a few.