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Anila Quayyum Agha (b. 1965, Lahore, Pakistan) works in a cross-disciplinary fashion with mixed media. She explores global politics, cultural multiplicity, and social and gender roles. As a result, her artwork is a conceptually challenging mixture of thought, artistic action and social experience. Since 2014 her work has been featured in more than fifteen solo museum exhibitions, including at the Seattle Asian Art Museum and Crow Museum of Asian Art in Dallas. Two large sculptural works were on view at Royal Botanic Gardens Kew in the U.K. in 2023.

 

Agha is internationally recognized for her large-scale cube installations that use light and pattern to immerse viewers in shared experiences and inclusive spaces. The patterns Agha laser cuts into the lacquered-steel cubes are a reinterpretation of floral and geometric motifs found in Islamic art and architecture in Asia and Africa. Suspended and lit from within, the cubes cast elaborate floor-to-ceiling shadows that transform the surrounding environment, alluding to the richly ornamented public spaces such as mosques that Agha was excluded from as a female growing up in Lahore.

 

In addition to her suspended installations, Agha creates wall-mounted two-dimensional works that play with light, shadow and pattern. Recent work includes resin paintings in which Agha radically expanded her use of color. She departed from her characteristic streamlined palettes in favor of vivid hues inspired by the high-contrast color combinations popular in South Asian and African textiles. Vivid color is also a centerpiece of her newest work, Cabinets of Curiosities. These paper collages bring together meticulously hand-cut images of flora and fauna, delicately embellished with stitching and beads and sealed within layers of clear resin.

 

After arriving in the United States from Pakistan in 2000, Agha attended graduate school to study fiber arts. Over time, she expanded her practice to include other mediums as her work became increasingly sculptural. While still a student, Agha was frequently told that as a woman, particularly a woman of color and an immigrant, she would never advance her career if she used techniques associated with craft or visual elements unique to Islamic culture. But after seeing exhibitions of the subversive embroidered paintings of Egyptian artist Ghada Amer, handsewn story quilts by African-American artist Faith Ringgold and multimedia installations created using textile techniques by American artists Anne Wilson and Ann Hamilton, Agha knew there was space for the kind of art she wanted to make, which was authentic to her life experiences while also conveying universal truths.

 

Anila Quayyum Agha received a BFA from the National College of Arts, Lahore, and an MFA from the University of North Texas.  Her work has been exhibited widely, including at Asia Society, New York; Seattle Asian Art Museum, Washington state; Michener Art Museum, Doylestown, Pennsylvania; Crow Museum of Asian Art, Dallas; Westmoreland Museum of American Art, Greensburg, Pennsylvania; and Aga Khan Museum, Toronto, among many others. Her work was included in the exhibition She Persists at the 2019 Venice Biennale.

 

Major awards include the 2019 Painters and Sculptors Grant from the Joan Mitchell Foundation and the 2021 Smithsonian Artist Research Fellowship. In 2025, Agha was a Joan Mitchell Center artist in residence. 

 

Anila Quayyum Agha lives in Indianapolis, Indiana.





 

Artnet News
新闻报刊
Artnet News
10 Buzzy Gallery Shows Not to Miss in New York This Month, From Uptown to Tribeca September 20, 2020

Mark your calendars for Anila Quayyum Agha's new show A Moment to Consider at Sundaram Tagore Chelsea.

Architectural Digest India
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Architectural Digest India
At Masterpiece London, a Generous Display of the Best Art the Subcontinent Has to Offer July 10, 2022

At the show this year, New Delhi's Dhoomimal Gallery makes its debut with India's revered modernists, while Pakistani-American artist Anila Quayyum Agha takes centre stage on this global platform.

The New York Times
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The New York Times
Anila Quayyum Agha Uses Patterns to Break Patterns June 27, 2022

Perceived dualities and opposites, including those around gender, animate Anila Quayyum Aghaʼs light installations, drawings and paintings.

Architectural Digest India
新闻报刊
Architectural Digest India
At Singapore Art Week, an all-women show confronts exclusion January 15, 2022

Sundaram Tagore Gallery’s show, A Room Of Her Own, features Anila Quayyum Agha, Tayeba Lipi, Lalla Essaydi, Karen Knorr, Miya Ando, Neha Vedpathak, Jane Lee and Susan Weil.

World Sculpture News
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World Sculpture News
Anila Quayyum Agha May 2, 2019

Over the past century, sculpture has changed its physical presence in all societies. While some works are still made to praise people and events uncritically, it now, more than ever, embraces all aspects of our turbulent and troubled world. 

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