There is damage on the top left and bottom right corner of the frame Reclining Nude is an exceptionally limited edition of 2 by Laxmi Hussain, created exclusively for Print...
There is damage on the top left and bottom right corner of the frame
Reclining Nude is an exceptionally limited edition of 2 by Laxmi Hussain, created exclusively for Print Club during her residency at our Dalston Print Studios in October 2025.
Screen-printed in Laxmi’s trademark single-colour blue onto Nepalese Mitsumata Washi paper (60gsm), a beautifully textured, softly fibred handmade paper with a luminous off-white tone, the piece carries the gentle fluidity of her original ink drawing with striking clarity. A rare and elegant work defined by delicate linework, rich natural texture, and serene minimalism.
Please note, due to the nature of the paper, this artwork is only available to be float framed.
ABOUT THE ARTIST
Laxmi Hussain
Elegant and ethereal but also precise and geometric, Laxmi Hussain’s drawings and paintings exist somewhere between the abstract and the realistic, often presenting what appear to be the free-flowing organic forms of the body through intricately ordered patterns. Her finely detailed line forms are rooted in a fascination with architecture, a subject she studied for several years before becoming disillusioned with the constraints and rigidity of the discipline and shifting her focus to the unconstrained creative possibilities offered by art.
Laxmi has been drawing for as long as she can remember. As a child in London, she would lose hours after school, sketching on the counter in her dad’s corner shop. But it is only since the birth of her first child, that Laxmi has turned her passion into a profession. Re-inspired by the irrepressible joy in creativity shown by her children, she picked up the pencil once again, finding artwork to be a valuable means of reclaiming her own identity amid the emotional blurrings of motherhood.
Her inspiration comes from the forms encountered in everyday life, from the body, the tenderness of motherhood, the natural shapes of the body as a vessel and its evolution throughout life. Working in several different media, usually at night, Laxmi is driven by experimentation, constantly exploring new techniques and searching for the shapes and subjects they express best. Often, her work includes elements that appear incomplete, obliging the viewer to pause and engage with the artwork, filling in the absences themselves rather than just dismissing it and moving on.