Boston Sunday Globe

Something old, something new

Bridal stylist and BU artist Linda Obobaifo plays with formal wear — and form itself

- WORKING ARTIST CATE MCQUAID Cate McQuaid can be reached at catemcquai­d@gmail.com.

Linda obobaifo had what she called “a light bulb moment” last spring. the Master of fine Arts candidate at boston university and fulltime bridal stylist was making paintings layered with lace and panels of plexiglas. the lace reminded her of wedding gowns and domestic interiors such as her great-grandmothe­r’s sofa. then the light went on: she broke out of painting’s traditiona­l rectangle. her paintings began to billow off the walls. now, there’s no stretcher bar at all.

“it’s been so much fun to allow things to go in whichever direction,” she said. “i’m not placing as much pressure on myself to have it look a certain way.”

obobaifo is a young artist to keep an eye on. We visited her in her bu studio.

where to find her: www.instagram.com/lindaoboba­ifo

age :23

originally from: naperville, ill.

Lives in: brighton. she’s moving to Manhattan at the end of May.

stylist and artist: “there are expectatio­ns of women — with beauty, but also, ‘oh, are you going to get married? Are you going to have kids?’ the weight and the gravity of what women carry are things i actively think about in my practice.”

studio: obobaifo’s big, sculptural paintings fill the walls — the older ones rectangula­r, the newer ones not. fabric samples hang in one corner. beads, wires, jute twine, needles, and more cover a worktable. A palette with dollops of acrylic and oil paint sits on a high stool.

Favorite material: the artist learned dressmakin­g from her mother. “the first dress i made was a lace dress. lace both reveals and hides the body. formally, i’m interested in the transparen­cy and layering and how far i can go with it. And the shadows that it casts are absolutely gorgeous.”

How she started: “With representa­tional painting. then i wanted to push myself to see what abstract painting and sculpting could look like. it wasn’t until last semester that i really broke the stretcher bar and decided to do a free form with chicken wire, using other materials like natural fibers, synthetics, China silk, organza, and lace.”

How she works: every piece begins on the floor. “there’s an underwire body that i create, and i start shaping it and molding it, and then it slowly goes on the wall. that’s when i start hand sewing. everything is hand sewed, hand knotted, hand beaded. i have a sewing machine, but i don’t use it. i find it easier to mold things when you’re freeformin­g it. there’s something to be said about the labor and the time that it takes me to do it.”

advice for artists: “Your work is a snapshot in time, and it’s necessary for the future work. if you’re not absolutely loving what you’re making, or you feel like, ‘i just wish it looked like XYZ,’ you have to trust in your own individual process and journey.”

 ?? Erin ClArK/globe stAff ?? Below: Linda Obobaifo, a 2024 MFA graduate student, in her Boston University studio, where she creates sculptural and collaged paintings that “explore the roles of women and domesticit­y through identity and collective histories.”
Erin ClArK/globe stAff Below: Linda Obobaifo, a 2024 MFA graduate student, in her Boston University studio, where she creates sculptural and collaged paintings that “explore the roles of women and domesticit­y through identity and collective histories.”
 ?? LindA obobAifo ?? At far left: Obobaifo’s “A Pure Woman’s Touch of Temperamen­t — Dragged Through Milk and Rope.”
LindA obobAifo At far left: Obobaifo’s “A Pure Woman’s Touch of Temperamen­t — Dragged Through Milk and Rope.”
 ?? Erin ClArK/globe stAff ?? Near left: paints in her studio.
Erin ClArK/globe stAff Near left: paints in her studio.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States