Rana Begum at The Delfina Foundation, London
Extracting banal hardware from its utilitarian context, Begum limited her materials to commercially available drinking straws, in five standard colors (fluorescent green, yellow, pink, orange and black). Composed entirely of glowing lines, the resulting modular superstructure demonstrates the generative potential of Begum's systematic application of the limited vocabulary of commercially available fluorescent materials.
No.207 is rooted in Rana's observation of the urban milieu, the aesthetic possibilities of the city and the implications of architectural modernism. Renewing her commitment to serial and rational forms and their subsequent emphasis of phenomenological strategies, Rana's work sets out to transform the overpowering associations of urban debasement into poetic entities: No.207's fluorescent colors evoke Beirut's buzzing night scene, and the convoluted modular shapes recall the chaotic maze of a metropolis.
Dealing with architectural propositions as much as with the formal possibilities of Minimalism, No.207 is an attempt to condense the urban experience to its most significant elements, to abstract analogous visual stimuli and subsequently articulate them into concrete forms and lights. Feeding on the architecture of a space, cutting lines across and reorganising it according to abstract cartographies, No.207 draws powerful associations between culture, architecture and design, and reinvents our relationship to artificial spaces.
The Delfina Foundation
29 Catherine Place,
Victoria,
London SW1E 6DY
5 February - 02 March 2010
Mon-Sat, 10:00 - 18:00

