Where art meets aesthetic medicine
Dr. Zafer Dajani is an Amman-based aesthetic doctor and practicing sculptor and painter. He treats the face the way an artist works clay — with proportion, restraint and a sculptor's eye.
Long before he trained in medicine, Dr. Zafer Dajani was already studying the human face — in clay, in charcoal, in marble. Sculpture teaches what textbooks cannot: how light falls across the cheekbone, how the ogee curve carries the profile, how deliberate asymmetry makes a face alive rather than manufactured. That artistic training is now the foundation of every injection he performs.
He is a doctor who is also an artist — an increasingly rare combination in aesthetic medicine. As an official trainer for Allergan Aesthetics, Fillmed Jordan and Teoxane Jordan, he teaches other injectors across the region. His community of 195,000+ followers on Instagram follow the practice for one reason: results that read as natural, never as work.

Fine Art → Facial Anatomy
A sculptor's approach to injectables.
In sculpture, you remove; you don't pile on. That principle governs every treatment plan. The goal is never to add the most product — it is to place the least product that reveals the face already there.
Fine-art rules — the ogee curve, the rule of thirds, the golden ratio, deliberate asymmetry — are not decoration. They are diagnostic tools. They tell us where a face is balanced and where it isn't.

"People will tell you that you look beautiful, radiant, glowing — never 'where did you get your face done?'"
— The signature promise of the practice
The natural-look philosophy.
Enhancement without overfilling. Contouring without the "done" look. Read why Dr. Dajani refuses volume for its own sake.
