New Jersey-based artist Madiha Siraj often uses everyday materials like clay, yarn, or paint swatches to creatively manipulate space. For this work, she covered every inch of a designated area with small square paint swatches to produce colorfully bold, pixelated results.
In doing so, she transformed the otherwise white walls and bare floor into a mesmerizing space. Anyone who chose to walk through the installation was consumed by the unorganized patterns of color. In the work, she also redefined the meaning of a single paint swatch which, when compiled together into a collective arrangement, became something entirely new. According to her bio, “Through her installations, Siraj seeks to challenge her audiences’ standards of perception, recognition, and context.”
Oyster EB-12 was first installed at the California College of the Arts during their Craft Forward Symposium in 2011, and a second version of the installation, called Oyster EB-124, followed.
Madiha Siraj’s website
via [Trend Hunter], [Triple Base Gallery]