Courtesy of the artistArt & PhotographyNewsBuy a limited edition print to support women and children in GazaPerformance artist Millie Brown has organised a limited edition print sale fundraiser, with all proceeds going to The Zaynab Project, a registered charity supporting families in GazaShareLink copied ✔️November 3, 2025Art & PhotographyNewsTextHalima JibrilZaynab Project Print Sale17 Imagesview more + Since the announcement of the ceasefire between Israel and Hamas on September 29, the Israeli military has committed more than 125 ceasefire violations and has killed 236 people, according to the Gaza Government Media Office. To support those on the ground, performance artist Millie Brown has organised a limited-edition print sale of Timed Edition signed prints with White Label Editions, to raise money for the Zaynab Project, which will run until November 7. “As someone of Palestinian lineage, I feel this moment deeply,” Brown tells Dazed. “The scale of suffering and injustice in Gaza is unbearable, and I reached a point where I could no longer sit with helplessness. Creating in the depth of destruction felt vital, a way to turn grief into action and unite artists around something profoundly human.” Brown has brought together artists from across generations and diverse practices who have donated their work for sale, including Martin Creed, Nick Knight, Maripol, Vinca Petersen, Adham Faramawy, Lina Iris Viktor, Nada Baraka, Matthew Stone, Nabil Elderkin, Hazem Harb, Patrick Martinez, Eddie Peake, Tali Lennox and more. Their donated works will never be available for purchase again. “It mattered to me that this wasn’t just about charity, but about accessibility, creating a model where meaningful art could reach more people and where every purchase became an act of participation in change,” she explains. Vinca Petersen, Carol and AshleyCourtesy of the artist The Zaynab Project is a woman-founded nonprofit organisation that provides direct, dignified and trauma-informed support to families and orphaned children in Gaza. Led by a volunteer team of mothers, doctors, and aid workers, the Zaynah Project provides on-the-ground, long-term support and care, including access to food, clean water, medical services, orphan sponsorship and child mental health care. “At a time when division and extremism dominate the narrative, art becomes a radical gesture. It asserts that our humanity is intertwined,” Brown asserts. “The artists who joined me in this project did so out of love, to use the value of their work to provide tangible support to families and orphans enduring unimaginable hardship.” All prints can be purchased here. Take a look at the gallery above for a preview of the selection. Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.READ MOREThe most loved photo stories from October 2025Art shows to leave the house for in November 2025These photos explore the emotional intensity of BDSMInside New York’s newly opened cult magazine archiveThis new short film embodies the spirit of MasqueradesParadigm Shift: This exhibition traces the major revolutions in video artMichella Bredahl’s new show confronts her relationship with her motherThese impactful photo projects respond to Black History MonthThe enigmatic artist who captured the comedy and violence of American lifeCinematic, film noir photos that capture the rhythm of TokyoThis photo series captures the flame of a first queer love‘Precarious, exhausting, and unfair’: How online censors stifle erotic art