Suzannah Pettigrew explores the distortion of memory in ‘A Sphinx Looking for a Poet’
London-based artist Suzannah Pettigrew displays her spectral imagery in an exhibition at Dover Street Market, Paris

Receive our daily digest of inspiration, escapism and design stories from around the world direct to your inbox
Thank you for signing up to Wallpaper. You will receive a verification email shortly.
There was a problem. Please refresh the page and try again.
To visit ‘A Sphinx Looking a Poet’ by artist Suzannah Pettigrew, currently on view at Dover Street Little Market in Paris, is to step into a memory palace constructed out of sumptuous and haunted images. A secluded room above the Dover Street Market store – exuding industrial austerity with concrete walls and a floor with cracking paint – is enlivened by the saturated tones of Pettigrew’s ‘photo-sculptures’: large-scale images printed on fabric and hung like curtains, depicting, variously, a bouquet of pink lilies, a winged sphinx at the base of a statue, and a tasselled canopy of a bed.
Untitled (Pink Lily), digital print on fabric, installation view, ‘A Sphinx Looking a Poet’ at Dover Street Little Market, Paris
In Pettigrew’s hands these everyday details are given a new poignancy, transformed into diaphanous monuments to the fragility of time: these are the moments that disappear in a flash, that fade from memory and don’t return. ‘My relationship with memory is that it distorts over time and there are different versions of shared memory,’ says Pettigrew. ‘This idea of distortion influenced me to create the photo-sculptures and initiate the practice of decoding mediums. For example, can a photograph become a sculpture?’
Suzannah Pettigrew, A Grand Canopy
Also on display are four photographs printed on aluminium that emanate the same spectral beauty as the photo-sculptures. We see a hand lighting a pale yellow candle, a cotton puff cloud hovering above a Parisian rooftop, an ornate ceiling in a room that exudes emptiness even though we can’t see it, and a tattooed arm reaching out, Michelangelo-like, towards the open palm of a marble sculpture.
Suzannah Pettigrew, Feed the Fire; Ghosting Hour; Ready to Receive; The Night of the 9th, of the 9th, all photo prints on aluminum, installation view at ‘A Sphinx Looking a Poet’
These images, as well as the three works on fabric, are drawn from Pettigrew’s book of poetry and imagery, also titled A Sphinx Looking a Poet, published in partnership with SITE Projects. The London-based artist composed the work when she temporarily relocated to Paris in 2016-2017. As she writes in the book’s introduction, ‘I left London to escape, to seek introspection…[A Sphinx Looking a Poet] is a mode of collecting and capturing events, exchanges and feelings that might have otherwise been forgotten. To draw focus on sensuality, both the thrill and the fallout. Often it's how I remember, through erotic markers of the past.’
A Sphinx Looking a Poet, a book of poetry and imagery by Suzannah Pettigrew
Pettigrew’s pearl-like poems are small, luminous distillations of oceanic feelings – loss, loneliness, lust, love. Like their accompanying imagery, they are exercises in remembering those emotions before they disappear. Whether it is a pang of desire for a lover (‘I watch you get out of bed with anticipation/ to take in your physicality with my eyes/ and watch its unconscious ode/ to the renaissance’); or longing for their recognition (‘Sitting silent I observe/ emulating a structure/ in the room you can see me in/ the ceramic vase/ the bronze statue/ the marble pillar’).
This latest exhibition gives Pettigrew a new opportunity to explore how words and images work together to document time, creating ‘a new dialogue between works’.
Suzannah Pettigrew, Untitled (Winged Sphinx), digital print on fabric, installation view at ‘A Sphinx Looking a Poet’
‘A Sphinx Looking a Poet’ is on view at Dover Street Little Market in partnership with 3537 until 9 July 2023. For those who can’t make it to the space, you can find the stockists of Pettigrew’s book on her website.
suzannahpettigrew.co.uk; 3537.org
Wallpaper* Newsletter
Receive our daily digest of inspiration, escapism and design stories from around the world direct to your inbox
Mary Cleary is the Beauty & Grooming Editor of Wallpaper*. Having been with the brand since 2017, she became an editor in February 2020 with the launch of the brand’s new beauty & grooming channel. Her work seeks to offer a new perspective on beauty, focusing on the pioneering personalities, product designs, and transformative trends within the industry.
-
Summer perfumes that transport you to a dream vacation
Take a trip around the world with these unisex summer perfumes inspired by Californian beaches, Ibizan parties, Mexican jungles, and more
By Mary Cleary Published
-
Eternity rings for the modern couple
Eternity rings, whether sleekly minimalist or sprinkled in diamonds, can be a chic and contemporary love token
By Hannah Silver Published
-
Make for Margate, the creative corner of Kent where change is the new constant
Discover Margate, the UK seafront town, whose spruced-up image is being driven by smart hotels, cultural attractions, and inviting dining spots, as recommended by travel journalist and regular visitor Josephine Price
By Josephine Price Published
-
Mark Rothko retrospective to open at Fondation Louis Vuitton in October 2023
The major Mark Rothko exhibition will bring 115 works to Fondation Louis Vuitton in Paris
By Hannah Silver Published
-
Jean-Michel Basquiat and Andy Warhol’s fruitful partnership explored in Paris
Fondation Louis Vuitton presents ‘Basquiat x Warhol. Painting 4 Hands’, exploring the collaboration between the two artists
By Hannah Silver Last updated
-
Paul Smith on art directing Pablo Picasso
Art directed by Paul Smith, ‘Picasso Celebration: The Collection in a New Light!’ at Paris’ Musée Picasso is a contemporary reframing of Picasso’s collection 50 years after his death. Deyan Sudjic speaks to Smith about his vision for the show
By Deyan Sudjic Published