Posts tagged: CATALYSTGSP

CATALYST: Scholar Spotlight – Lubna Ali

Ali is based in Manchester. She has exhibited in the UK and has work in public and private collections. In 2018 she was artist-in-residence at The Whitworth Gallery, Manchester. She was also a founder and member of print collective Rhubarb & Custard. Print Unltd was presented by the University of Salford Art Collection in partnership with Salford Museum and Art Gallery, Salford Community Leisure, Hot Bed Press, and was funded by Arts Council England.


My Tiles install shot
Image: Courtesy of Jules Lister

Ali’s My Tiles was originally commissioned for Print Unltd, an exhibition of four North West based artists making new work which aims to celebrate and challenge printmaking practices today. My Tiles is inspired by the tradition of Islamic geometric pattern-making, which uses tessellated shapes and repeated motifs to create often intricate designs. They may be used to consider topics of unity, infinity and connection.

Rather than using digital scanning or editing, Ali’s works are all carefully drawn by hand before being exposed directly on screens. The first image in the series consists of a simple diamond shape; and as the work progresses new patterns and colours are added to each print. As the edition number increases, further pattern and colour is added – creating an unusual method of editioning the work wherein higher edition numbers become more complex works. In total Ali created an edition of 50 prints with 6 sub-editions. The first and last in the series, on display here, were acquired into the Collection.


My Tiles close-up shot
Image: Courtesy of Sam Parker

~ Sean Rorke, Artistic Director at Hot Bed Press




CATALYST: Scholar Spotlight – Katie Aird

Aird is a photographer and art director based in Manchester, working across fine art, photography, and commercial and editorial work. Her work has been featured by the United Nations, Redeye: The Photography Network, and Lomography. She recently published two zines: Only Fans and Lost and Styled. This work also featured at the University of Salford Art Collection booth at The Manchester Contemporary 2023.


Image: Courtesy of Jules Lister

Aird utilises 35mm photography and experimental techniques to explore cycles of life, death, and infinite energy. Her work is inspired by the concept of ‘entropy’ from thermodynamics – which concerns energy, order and disorder – and how it relates to human psychology. Original images of flowers – which symbolise the cycles of nature and regeneration that are part of everyday life – are distorted through a process of ‘scanography’ – using a flatbed scanner as a camera to manipulate light and form in unexpected ways.


Images: Courtesy of Sam Parker



CATALYST: Scholar Spotlight – Suraj Adekola

Adekola was born in 1983. He is a Nigerian artist currently living in Manchester. His work is informed by post-colonial narratives, through painting, installation, and drawing, he uses elements of contemporary and historical material to explore themes of migration, globalisation, identity politics, equality, diversity, and inclusivity. He has exhibited work internationally including in London and Nigeria.



Image: Install shot courtesy of Jules Lister

This work is part of a series titled We Should All Be Blacks, which Adekola began during his 2022 MA studies. The artist uses the traditional ‘Adire’ fabric as the foundation of the work – a popular indigenous tie-dyed fabric made in his hometown of Egbaland, Abeokuta (the ‘capital of Adire-making’ in Nigeria). The artist deconstructs, fragments, weaves and stitches the material together, creating vibrant forms and patterns inspired by Cubism. On the surface he uses spray paint, oil stick, and bleach to draw figurative and abstract motifs. This stitching together of fragmented forms and varied mediums symbolises a deep-seated desire for belonging and inclusion, ‘mirroring the Black experience – a tapestry woven from diverse threads’. The work and material are imbued with personal narrative, memories, cultural references, and celebrates art as a way to share Black histories.



Image: Close-up shot courtesy of Jules Lister