Lubna Chowdhary's Reinvention of Form Allie Biswas visits artist Lubna Chowdhary to discuss sculpture, ceramics and fear of empty space ahead of a solo exhibition at PEER, London, opening in September 2021 BY ALLIE BISWAS IN PROFILES | 24 AUG 21
The grey and white monochrome sculptures that Lubna Chowdhary shows me when I visit her home in southwest London are rarities in an artistic practice that has consistently used a vibrant colour palette. Displayed on a large trestle table, amongst ceramic works and gouache paintings, Blueprint (2017) and Grey Area (2021) both consist of numerous, free-standing clay objects, each about the size of a hand, which have been assembled in a group. Chowdhary tells me she developed them as maquettes for thinking about ‘micro architecture – small-scale built objects that you can inhabit’. Featuring medieval forts alongside futuristic urban structures, these intricate sculptural landscapes evoke buildings and furniture from disparate realms, although the pared-down forms are united in their patterned surfaces and embellished contours. ‘As ornamentation is at the heart of these works, keeping them white allowed for a clearer experience of such details,’ Chowdhary explains. In establishing her ideas in relation to what she considers the reinvention of form, these models led to the artist’s first sculptures in wood, which will be shown in a forthcoming exhibition at PEER Gallery, London, in September, before featuring in a larger survey of the artist’s work next year at the Middlesbrough Institute of Modern Art.