Body Diary 0215_153807 girl sword (spring time)

Lou Lou Sainsbury

Body Diary 0215_153807 girl sword (spring time), 202241.3 x 27.6cmSign in to view price
Details
Material
pigment print on mylar
Similar Artworks
Green Elevation
The Hours After
Durian Desire
Starlight
Betsy BradleyStarlight, 2022
140 x 100cm
Octopus
Betsy BradleyOctopus, 2021
200 x 189cm
Goldfish
Betsy BradleyGoldfish, 2024
120 x 163cm
Rebecca Triumphant
Pin
Paloma ProudfootPin
17 x 9 x 9cm
Bageze ngobisi 8
Saint
Betsy BradleySaint, 2024
49 x 54cm
Bebop
Betsy BradleyBebop, 2024
93 x 63cm
Izintaba
Buhlebezwe SiwaniIzintaba, 2023
140 x 140cm
Ribs in ribbons
Tail End
Bageze ngobisi 2
Waterfall
Hoa Dung ClergetWaterfall, 2023
44 x 98 x 5cm
Chinoiserie (Jade) 2
Sound Bleed
Paloma ProudfootSound Bleed, 2025
136 x 102.5 x 7.5cm
Weeknight
Izintaba
Buhlebezwe SiwaniIzintaba, 2023
160 x 200cm
Izintaba
Buhlebezwe SiwaniIzintaba, 2023
160 x 200cm
Sting to your bow
Reef
Betsy BradleyReef, 2022
159 x 179cm
Symptom
Paloma ProudfootSymptom, 2024
176 x 195 x 4cm
Neck Laced #3
Davide StucchiNeck Laced #3, 2024
22 x 20 x 26cm ⌀20cm
Path
Morgan WillsPath, 2024
85 x 100cm
Sunbeam's Frenz (the Solar Anus)
Artist
Lou Lou Sainsbury
B.1994

Lou Lou Sainsbury is an artist based between Rotterdam, NL working across film, live-performance, poetry, drawing, sculpture and textiles. She is a self-described time traveller, making things that unwrite histories of living beings into tricksterish dreamscapes, exploring identity, community and ecological entanglement. She often works in collaboration, developing intimate long term research-led projects guided by improvisation, cinematic processes and sonic thinking. Sainsbury’s work questions how we can become better listeners and how bodies can trouble history and geography. Moving across a poetics of sensual communion, her practice maps a cosmology of saints, aliens, hauntings, musicality, mysticism and elemental passions. Within this, writing ritual, collective study, domestic intervention, adaptation, song writing and make-shift mutations make up some of her idiosyncratic research methods. Utilising an expansive sensory material vernacular, Sainsbury’s work speaks towards transfeminine experience as a social process of finding resonance and belonging within the brokenness of human and more- than-human worlds. Through sonic exploration, splits, leakages, loops and remains, her genre-bending practice defies categorisation whilst troubling the cinematic. Rooted in friendships and everyday life, haunted and heartfelt, or humorous and uncompromising, her transformative work seeks to imagine stories for more liberated futures. ...