Bio Born in UK. Based in London. UK Teaching: 'Going Public' Lecture at KU Leuven Faculty of Architecture, Gent, Belgium, 2024; 'Care, Make, Maintain' Lecture at Kunstuniversität Linz, Linz, Austria, 2024; Tutor at European Architecture Student Assembly, Sheffield, 2023; Visiting Tutor, Open Accelerate, 2023; Tutor at Store Store After School Club, 2022. Exhibitions: Royal Academy Summer Show, 2023; Oslo Architecture Triennale: Neighbourhood Index, 2022. Awards: Quilt City short-listed for the Global Design Graduate Show 2022 in collaboration with GUCCI, 2022; Nominated for the AJ Student Prize, 2022; RIBA London (West) Student Award, 2021.
Artist Statement | Knowledge of the Ancients
I am an architectural designer and artist from London, currently working at Architecture practice Assemble. My practice focuses on the sociopolitical impact of architecture and its role in facilitating or inhibiting the way we live and our right to the city. I explore these concepts through drawing, model-making, textiles and film.
Anna Russell and Pei-Chi Lee | A Seat On Circular Road | 2024 | 20 min | Video | NFS
A Seat On Circular Road
This film uses the repair of a found broken chair to explore manual labour in Pakistan, where traditional methods and manual skills remain integral to everyday life and industry. It examines the informal, inconsistent systems of measurement often employed in these settings — where a worker’s hand span or length from nose to arm can define a unit, resulting in inevitable variations.
The act of making is central to the project, with the process of measuring becoming a performance in itself. We measure a string using only our bodies — stretching it from one arm to another, from our feet to beyond our heads — evoking the improvisation inherent in manual labour, a common practice in desi measurement. The film unfolds in four acts: situating the chair frame on the roof where it was found, cutting the material based on our bodies measurements, weaving the chair, and culminating with our driver, Boota, seated on the finished woven chair, observing the bustling street life around him.
Boota (Muhammad Boota), who drove us throughout Lahore, would patiently sit in his chair, waiting for us when we weren’t on the road. His presence symbolises time and stillness — two themes central to the film. Coming from London, we found Lahore to move at a slower pace. As we worked in the heat, our sense of time gradually shifted to accommodate this new rhythm.
The editing of the film follows the weaving process. You see us talking, threading, guiding the string through gaps, tying knots, weaving, counting threads, making mistakes, undoing, and trimming. We move around the chair — standing, sitting, and constantly adjusting our positions as we adapt to the motion of the process. The pacing alternates between slow and fast, reflecting the rhythm of the manual labour of weaving . Meanwhile, the audio unfolds its own narrative, running parallel to the visual acts, creating a layered story within the film.
The film was made at the Barkat Ali Islamia Hall in Lahore’s Old City, a site rich with cultural and historical resonance. Through this film we also seek to reveal the spaces within the building, to create a greater understanding of its form, tectonics, and interconnection to Circular Road. This project was produced during the Divvy Delfina Residency and supported by Foundation Art Divvy, Delfina Foundation, and the British Council.
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1 Desi meaning ‘of, from, or characteristic of India, Pakistan, or Bangladesh.’ The term ‘Desi’ is derived from the Sanskrit word ‘Desh’, which means ‘country’. Initially used to signify something ‘from the country’, its meaning has evolved to encompass people, cultures, and products from a specific region. For instance, we now commonly refer to desi food, desi calendars, and desi clothing.