Paris Internationale - © Paris Internationale
Niru Ratnam - © Paris Internationale
Niru Ratnam

Niru Ratnam opened in 2020, exhibiting a diverse roster of artists from across geographies and generations, often focusing on artists from previously underrepresented backgrounds. We are committed to showing wide range of media that includes film, installation and performance as well as painting and sculpture. The gallery’s program builds on Ratnam’s earlier career as a writer and academic whose work focused on issues such as postcolonialism and globalisation in relation to modern and contemporary art.

71-73 Great Portland Street
London
W1W 7LP
UK

“Pushing the image through different lenses, textures and mediums, it eventually becomes something very different.”

Louis Blue Newby and Laila Majid, Metal Magazine

Laila Majid and Louis Blue Newby’s shared practice is a space for the artist duo to explore the way images gain meaning through being shared and distributed between individuals both privately and through social media and the public sphere. Each artist has an individual practice and the gallery represents Majid’s solo practice along with Newby and Majid’s collaborative practice. The duo collate images from many sources, both printed and online that range from magazines, porn sites, online forums and comics. The source images are mostly fast-moving and disposable, part of the constant flow of visual information that surrounds us. Majid and Newby’s practice slows these images down by destabilizing or de-anchoring the image through processes such as scanning, drawing and layering. The ongoing exchange of the same image between the two of them, that is then worked on by one of the duo at a time is also key here.

Mediation then, might be seen as the key to understanding their practice, leading tor the transformation of images through a heightened or specific attention made to materiality. This might be the use of a material such as translucent resin cast from leather that appears like a skin overlaying the surface of an image, or using 16mm film to capture a sequence of AI generated images. In their recent show at CCA Goldsmiths Majid and Newby used digital thermal-transfer printing software which changes data and noise into a series of almost imperceptible series of long lines. The artists then copied these lines in hand in graphite pencil, taking it in turns to work. There is a push-and-pull at work here in this example – on the one hand, there is an erasure of self in the laborious mechanical process that removes the traces of each artist’s individual identity in the finished works. But on the other hand there is something that affirms the way an individual can relate to another – as Newby has stated in an interview the duo’s collaboration began as “a literal text chain of two people trying to keep in touch.”

The space that Majid and Newby’s way of working opens up is in one sense temporal; it invites the viewer to spend more time considering an image than if it had been encountered in its original context. Looking changes from being passive to active and in doing so opens up the possibility of looking at something with a sense of recognition and even perhaps, desire. That the images that form the source material tend towards the subversive means that this moment of recognition can be rather surprising, not least to the viewer themselves. As the critic Matthew McClean notes: ‘to interpret ‘Contact (Bucks) – to ‘own it’ – I have to out myself as a certain type of person: one who spends enough time on the internet to know that mud porn is a thing.”

'Contact'
Installation view: Laila Majid and Louis Blue Newby 'Inner Heat' at Goldsmiths CCA, London.  Photo: Rob Harris - © Paris Internationale

Installation view: Laila Majid and Louis Blue Newby ‘Inner Heat’ at Goldsmiths CCA, London. Photo: Rob Harris

“There is a formality to the drawings…one that transforms disposable images into something that actually demands your time and attention and calls for a different type of reading.”

Laila Majid and Louis Blue Newby, Metal Magazine

Contact (Blessed) - © Paris Internationale
Laila Majid and Louis Blue Newby
Contact (Blessed), 2024

Graphite on paper, perspex and wood frame
46.5 x 117 x 5 cm (18 1/4 x 46 x 2 in)

Available, £7,500 + applicable taxes
Inquire
Contact (Bucks) - © Paris Internationale
Laila Majid and Louis Blue Newby
Contact (Bucks), 2024

graphite on paper, perspex and wood frame
46.5 x 87 x 5 cm (18 1/4 x 34 1/4 x 2 in)

Available, £5,000 + + applicable taxes
Inquire
Contact (Send) - © Paris Internationale
Laila Majid and Louis Blue Newby
Contact (Send), 2024

Graphite on paper, perspex and wood frame
46.5 x 36.5 x 5 cm (18 1/4 x 14 3/8 x 2in)

Available, £2,000 + applicable taxes
Inquire
Contact (Forum) - © Paris Internationale
Laila Majid and Louis Blue Newby
Contact (Forum), 2024

Graphite on paper, perspex and wood frame
46.5 x 308 x 5 cm (18 1/4 x 121 1/4 x 2 in),

Available, £12,000 + applicable taxes
Inquire
'Spread'
Installation view: Laila Majid and Louis Blue Newby 'In Passing' at Niru Ratnam, London.  Photo: Damian Griffiths - © Paris Internationale

Installation view: Laila Majid and Louis Blue Newby ‘In Passing’ at Niru Ratnam, London. Photo: Damian Griffiths

“In the Spreads series we collage different scanned imagery from various sources, which is a distinct, flattening process. Unmooring an image from its distinct point in time and then setting it free changes the way you view it.”

Laila Majid and Louis Blue Newby, Metal Magazine

Spread (Secret Places) - © Paris Internationale
Laila Majid and Louis Blue Newby
Spread (Secret Places), 2025

Inkjet print on Canson photo lustre, aluminum, glassine, Crisco, graphite, epoxy resin, obeah and maple tray frame
29 x 53.5 x 4.5 cm (11 3/8 x 21 x 1 3/4 in)

Available, £2,000 + applicable taxes
Inquire
Spread (In a world of Fantasy) - © Paris Internationale
Laila Majid and Louis Blue Newby
Spread (In a world of Fantasy), 2023

Inkject print on Canson Photo Lustre, alumnium, glassine, crisco, graphite, epoxy resin, obeah and maple tray frame
29 x 53.5 x 4.5 cm (11 3/8 x 21 x 1 3/4 in)

Available, £2,000 + applicable taxes
Inquire
Spread (Weather Vain) - © Paris Internationale
Laila Majid and Louis Blue Newby
Spread (Weather Vain), 2025

Inkjet print on Canson photo lustre, aluminum, glassine, Crisco, graphite, epoxy resin, obeah and maple tray frame
29 x 53.5 x 4.5 cm (11 3/8 x 21 x 1 3/4 in)

Available, £2,000 + applicable taxes
Inquire
Biography

Laila Majid and Louis Blue Newby live and work in London.

Solo shows include: Inner Heat, Goldsmiths Centre for Contemporary Art, London, (2024); BEAUTIFUL GIRLS ON TOP!, Xxijra Hii hosted by The Shop at Sadie Coles, London (2023); SKINFLICKS, Xxijra Hii, London (2022); not yet, San Mei Gallery, London (2022); and healthy pink, springseason, London (2020). Selected group exhibitions include: Forum, Xxijra Hii, London (2024); Trance, Tallinn Photomonth Biennial, Tallinn (2023); To The Friend Who Did Not Save My Life, Enjoy, Wellington Te Whanganui-a-Tara (2023); After the End, Nada Curated, New Art Dealers (2023); and Allow Cookies, Kupfer, London (2023).

Their moving-image work south florida sky was selected for the 2024 Frieze x ICA Artists’ Film Programme, Institute of Contemporary Art, London; and for the CIRCA x Dazed Class of 2022.

They will have their first solo show with Niru Ratnam, London in Spring 2026.

You are using an outdated browser.
Please upgrade your browser to improve your experience.