The Wick List

Viewing No.9 Cork Street’s Transnational Programme

No.9 Cork Street’s programme this month brings South Asian and diasporic perspectives into focus through two exhibitions staged in close dialogue. Nature Morte is a two-person presentation by Martand Khosla and Saad Qureshi, whose sculptural and drawn works explore the tension between architecture’s promise of permanence and its inevitable failure. Through voids, ash, charcoal and sand, both artists reflect on memory, erasure and what remains after the disintegration of the built world.

Alongside it, Bolanle Contemporary presents Osman Yousefzada’s A Home That Will Not Behave, an exhibition that approaches the domestic interior as a charged, unstable site shaped by intimacy and bodily presence. Working across pigment, fibre, collage, screen printing, embroidery and hand painting, Yousefzada builds layered environments in which storytelling plays a central role, opening up questions around marginalisation and resistance, and the power of domestic spaces as sites of refuge, refusal and renewal. Together, the two exhibitions offer a compelling snapshot of contemporary South Asian and diasporic practice.

Share story
Further Information
READ MORE
The Wick Culture - Family Group, 1948-49. Photo: Ines Stuart-Davidson
The Wick List

Viewing Henry Moore: Monumental Nature

The Wick Culture - Courtesy of Somerset House
The Wick List

Viewing London Original Print Fair 2026

The Wick Culture - Photo: Damiano Baschiera
The Wick List

Viewing 61st Venice Biennale: In Minor Keys

The Wick Culture - NIGO photographed at the Design Museum. Photo: Elliot James Kennedy
The Wick List

Viewing NIGO: From Japan with Love

The Wick Culture - Onya McCausland, 54.82776° N, 1.31629° W, 2025. © BJ Deakin Photography
The Wick List

Viewing Onya McCausland: Tailings

The Wick Culture - Undercroft Skate Space, 1989 ©Tim Leighton Boyce_Curtis McCann Southbank. Images courtesy The Read and Destroy Archive
The Wick List

Viewing Skate 50