In Conversation with Aqsa Arif and Priyesh Mistry: Public programme connected to 'Raindrops of Rani'

13 Aug 2025 

On Wednesday 13th August at 6.30pm please join us for a hybrid artist's talk to celebrate Aqsa Arif’s solo exhibition Raindrops of Rani, in conversation with Curator Priyesh Mistry.

 

Taking place in our Cafe near Gallery 2 where the exhibition is on display, as well as being available to join online, the conversation will be followed by a short Q&A.

 

Tickets are £5/£3 and £2 concession.

 

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Aqsa Arif is a Scottish-Pakistani interdisciplinary artist and filmmaker based in Glasgow. Her work explores hybrid identity, displacement, and cultural dissonance through speculative fiction, weaving folklore, mythology, and cinematic language. Arif was nominated for the major national touring exhibition Jerwood Survey III (2023-2024). She was awarded the 20/20 residency by UAL’s Decolonising Arts Institute, hosted at Kelvingrove, culminating in her first solo museum exhibition and 20 new permanent acquisitions across UK public art collections. She has been selected for residencies at Hospitalfield, Jupiter Artland, Edinburgh Printmakers, The Hugo Burge Foundation and Cove Park. 

 

 

Priyesh Mistry is Associate Curator for Modern and Contemporary Projects at the National Gallery where he manages an ambitious programme connecting contemporary artists to its historic collections. Recent projects include ‘Nalini Malani: My Reality is Different’, ‘Paula Rego: Crivelli’s Garden’, and ‘Katrina Palmer: The Touch Report’, among many others. Previously, he was Assistant Curator, International Art at Tate Modern where he co-curated exhibitions, including the Hyundai Commission 2019: Kara Walker in the Turbine Hall, alongside numerous collection displays of artists from the South Asia subcontinent. Priyesh is a member of the Faculty of Fine Arts at the British School at Rome, sits on the Fourth Plinth Commissioning Group led by the Mayor of London’s office, a Trustee of Studio Voltaire, London, and is a member of the 2025 Turner Prize Jury panel.

 

 

The exhibition Raindrops of Rani uses elements of South Asian folklore to explore themes of fractured identity, displacement, and cultural synthesis through fantasy and world-building. The show draws on the folk tragedy Heer Ranjha and in particular the forced separation of a South Asian Princess who now finds herself in a council flat in Glasgow dealing with the pressures to assimilate in a hostile environment.

 

Find out more about Aqsa Arif's solo show here and Robert Powell's show 'Hall of Hours' here. Both exhibitions are presented by Edinburgh Printmakers as part of the 2025 Edinburgh Art Festival.

 

This exhibition is supported by Creative Scotland's Open Fund for Individuals, Print Clan, Brick + Mortar, and Too Happy Studios.

 

 

This event is part of our heritage project Castle Mills: Then & Now supported by the National Lottery Heritage Fund, made possible by money raised by National Lottery players.