Shop From our International Women's Day Artists. Get to know the work of our artists involved in our Sarabande exhibition, 'Homesick', curated by alumni, Shirin Fathi.
This International Women's Day, Homesick brings together eleven Sarabande artists who redefine the conventional notion of “home”. By dismantling expectations, they spark conversations about family, queerness, nomadism, post-humanism, and the body as an internalised landscape of home. In Homesick, “home” is no longer a fixed concept—it is worn, carried, and continually reshaped, dissolving the boundaries between self and space.
SHIRIN FATHI
Shirin Fathi is a multi-disciplinary artist and curator. Her own practice focuses on cultural changes in relation to gender identity. Through role-play and the use of cosmetics, masks, and prosthetics, she uses her body as a subject to stage ambiguous and often marginalized identities.




ADELE BRYDGES
Adele Brydges is a ceramic designer and artist whose work sits at the intersection of sensuality, connection, and self-expression. Brydge’s practice spans functional erotic ceramics, workshops, and immersive experiences that explore new dimensions of pleasure and intimacy. She creates pieces that invite tactile dialogue and introspection, celebrating the beauty and depth of human experience.




BEX MASSEY
Bex Massey is a British artist whose work examines the role of painting and the language of display in the face of popular culture. She amalgamates simulacra and allegory to investigate notions of ‘worth’ via motifs and tones extracted from her childhood. Massey’s previous works and exhibitions have engaged the codes and history of queer culture, along
with markers of selfhood and Northern identity.



HELENA LACY
Helena Lacy is a ceramic artist who creates sculptures and one-of-a-kind furniture pieces. Material exploration is central to her work, particularly how materials layer and interact to replicate natural patterns. Her work reflects a balance between structure and unpredictability. Fascinated by natural movements and distortions, Lacy experiments with glazing techniques that mimic the flows of water, lava, and other natural phenomena, using the kiln as a second conductor to balance control and spontaneity




JENNIFER JONES
Central to Jones’ practice are textiles objects such as rugs and tapestries conceived to exist within the home as well as a gallery context. However, her work spans an array of media including painting, drawing, writing and photography. Many of these works begin by manipulating personal photos that range across family members and time.

KASIA WOZNIAK
Kasia Wozniak is an artist whose work investigates the tangibility of the photograph and how we view photographs today. Using predominantly the wet plate collodion technique, she interrogates ‘truth’ in photography and questions how we experience the time present and time past. Working with the analogue enables Wozniak to stretch and distort the experience of time. While using long exposures, laborious darkroom experimentations and manipulations she explores the idea of approximation, moving away from veracity to something more liminal.

MAIRI MILLAR
Mairi Millar is a Trinidadian artist whose practice centers on the relationship between human culture and our physicality, and how jewellery acts as a mediator between the two, having an intimate relationship to our body whilst acting as a language to the public. Mairi is currently exploring local myths in her country centered around women; how these stories are often in contrast to the dark reality around gender-based violence that has always festered but has escalated within the pandemic.

SHAN HUA
Shan Hua is a digital artist based in London. Her work primarily explores the relationship between pop culture and social change, using digital imagery and fairytale-like narratives to express her thoughts on identity. Shan’s practice often draws from personal experiences to examine and reflect on broad societal shifts in a microcosmic way, revealing deeper cultural and social meanings hidden within everyday life.





YIJIA WU
Yijia Wu is a multidisciplinary artist who’s practice explores the everydayness, fluid notion of home, and both collective and individual experiences of migration. Through performance, sculpture, and installation, she utilises mundane, often domestic materials to create paradoxical situations for everyday life.In her recent work, Wu delves into the cultural significance embedded within ordinary objects and materials.

This International Women's Day, celebrate and support our incredible female presenting artists who are redefining what 'home' means. By collecting work from these artists, you're not only investing in thought provoking pieces, but also supporting the female voices of our foundation!
To come and see their work in person, join us at our 'Homesick' exhibition, 5th-12th March.
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