Yasmeen Khan | Night Ruins, 2024
Media Dimensions: 33 x 40 cm
Image Dimensions: 24 x 30 cm
Unique Work
Framed only
Split your payment over 10 months with OwnArt 0% APR. Your monthly payment for this artwork would be £15.00.
Yasmeen Khan is an Edinburgh based printmaker, writer and illustrator. In her printmaking practice, she works mainly with monotype and various intaglio processes, because she finds them perfect for creating ambiguous, expressive and intriguing images that test the boundaries between abstraction and representation. Khan's prints are about haunting and nostalgia, and also about genre. She's interested in how narratives work through constructing spaces and landscapes, and speaking to something else we already know. She aims to explore these resonances and create spaces for stories to unfold in that will also draw the viewer in; spaces that project into the world and absorb something of it.
Media Dimensions: 33 x 40 cm
Image Dimensions: 24 x 30 cm
Unique Work
Framed only
Split your payment over 10 months with OwnArt 0% APR. Your monthly payment for this artwork would be £15.00.
Yasmeen Khan is an Edinburgh based printmaker, writer and illustrator. In her printmaking practice, she works mainly with monotype and various intaglio processes, because she finds them perfect for creating ambiguous, expressive and intriguing images that test the boundaries between abstraction and representation. Khan's prints are about haunting and nostalgia, and also about genre. She's interested in how narratives work through constructing spaces and landscapes, and speaking to something else we already know. She aims to explore these resonances and create spaces for stories to unfold in that will also draw the viewer in; spaces that project into the world and absorb something of it.
Media Dimensions: 33 x 40 cm
Image Dimensions: 24 x 30 cm
Unique Work
Framed only
Split your payment over 10 months with OwnArt 0% APR. Your monthly payment for this artwork would be £15.00.
Yasmeen Khan is an Edinburgh based printmaker, writer and illustrator. In her printmaking practice, she works mainly with monotype and various intaglio processes, because she finds them perfect for creating ambiguous, expressive and intriguing images that test the boundaries between abstraction and representation. Khan's prints are about haunting and nostalgia, and also about genre. She's interested in how narratives work through constructing spaces and landscapes, and speaking to something else we already know. She aims to explore these resonances and create spaces for stories to unfold in that will also draw the viewer in; spaces that project into the world and absorb something of it.