Rana Begum

WP308. 2019

Year 2019
Medium Reflective tape on paper
Dimensions 30 x 21 cm
Top pick Dr Maria Balshaw, CBE, Director of Tate and Duro Olowu, fashion designer

About the work

The work of London-based artist Rana Begum distills spatial and visual experience into ordered form. Through her refined language of Minimalist abstraction, Begum blurs the boundaries between sculpture, painting and architecture. Her visual language draws from the urban landscape as well as geometric patterns from traditional Islamic art and architecture. Light is fundamental to her process. Her works absorb and reflect varied densities of light to produce an experience for the viewer that is both temporal and sensorial. 

These are part of series of works Begum will be showing at her upcoming show The Third Line.

Date and country of birth

1977, BD

About the artist

Born in Bangladesh, Rana Begum lives and works in London. Graduated from BA Fine Art at Chelsea College of Art and Design (1999), and MFA Painting at Slade School of Fine Art (2002).

The work of London-based artist Rana Begum distils spatial and visual experience into ordered form. Through her refined language of Minimalist abstraction, Begum blurs the boundaries between sculpture, painting and architecture. Her visual language draws from the urban landscape as well as geometric patterns from traditional Islamic art and architecture. Light is fundamental to her process. Begum’s works absorb and reflect varied densities of light to produce an experience for the viewer that is both temporal and sensorial.

Selected exhibitions include Is This Tomorrow?, Whitechapel Gallery, London (2019); Space, Light & Colour, Djanogly Gallery, Nottingham (2018); Solo show, TATE, St Ives (2018); Actions, Kettle’s Yard, Cambridge (2018); Women to Watch: Heavy Metal, NMWA, Washington (2018); Occasional Geometries, (Curator), Yorkshire Sculpture Park, Wakefield (2017); Space Light Colour, Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts, Norwich (2017); Tribute to Sol Lewitt, Gemeente Museum Den Haag, The Hague (2016); Flatland/Narrative, MRAC, Sérignan (2016); The Space Between, Parasol Unit, London (2016); 11th Gwangju Biennale (2016); Geometries of Difference, Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art, New York (2015); and Solo Project, Dhaka Art Summit, Bangladesh (2014 & 2020).