FT | Americas
Shahzia Sikander: ‘I’ve carried the erasure of feminine narratives’
沙齐亚·西坎德:“我承载了女性叙事的消失”

2026-03-18 1517词 晦涩
Breuer was born to a Jewish family in Pécs, Hungary, and grew up not far from the 16th-century Mosque of Pasha Qasim, a domed landmark that was converted to a Catholic church after the Ottomans were driven out of the ancient city. It’s the type of cultural mélange that Sikander sees reflected in Breuer’s light-filled, geometric designs — and in her own life story. Born in Lahore, Pakistan, in 1969, and raised Muslim, she attended a Catholic school there, moved to the US in the early 1990s and has continued to criss-cross the globe for months or years at a time — from Japan to Laos to Italy — in the interest of deepening her multidisciplinary practice, which spans painting, drawing, mosaic, glass, video and sculpture.
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