(b. 1998, Dhaka, Bangladesh) is an artist based in London. Drawing from his memories and lived experiences, he creates image-based works and installations that explore and decode microhistories and their global impacts. His practice investigates communication, miscommunication, and adopts a reparative reading of the past. By creating spaces to revisit societal norms and traditions, and advocating for the recognition of adverse elements, Hoque imagines how we can act in society.

contact.laisulhoque@gmail.com

Instagram 

2024  
An Ode to All the Flavours


2024
I don’t Call Enough But I’m Here Now


2023  
The Purpose was to Document the Other Side


2023  
I Wish I Could Tell You Exactly How I Feel








Education

2020 - 2022


2016 - 2020



MA in Contemporary Photography; Practices and
Philosophies
, Central Saint Martins, UAL, London

BA in English Literature, North South University, Dhaka


Award


2025  East London Art Prize, Shortlisted
2024  CIRCA Prize, Finalist



Upcoming 


28th Nov 2024An Ode to All the Flavours, a day-long Exhibition, Whitechapel Gallery, London
4th - 8th Dec 2024The Purpose was to Document the Other Side, EXPERIMENTA 2024, Goethe-Institut/Max Mueller Bhavan, Bangalore



Exhibitions and Screenings 

(* indicates solo)


2024The Purpose was to Document the Other Side, Screened at Piccadilly Lights screen, London
(as part of CIRCA Prize)

2024The Purpose was to Document the Other Side, Screened at Limes Kurfürstendamm screen, Berlin (as part of CIRCA Prize)
2024The Purpose was to Document the Other Side, Screened at Essilor Luxottica screen in Cadorna Square, Milan (as part of CIRCA Prize)
2024An Ode to All the Flavours, Solo Exhibition, Kobi Nazrul Centre, London *

2024The Purpose was to Document the Other Side, Solo Screening, Project Banani 18, Dhaka *
2024The Purpose was to Document the Other Side, Solo Screening, Studio 6/6, Dhaka *
2024The Purpose was to Document the Other Side, Solo Screening, EkshoEk, Dhaka *
2024Shorts: Joyful Lands, Joyful Bodies, Chronic Youth Film Festival, Group Screening, Barbican Centre, London
2024I don’t Call Enough but I’m Here Now, Solo Exhibition, Oitij-jo, London *
2023Bhalo Basha, Group Screening, Toynbee Hall, London
2023ELO MELO Festival, Oitij-jo x Whitechapel Gallery, Group Screening, Whitechapel Gallery, London
2023Molasses Vases, Group Exhibition, hARTslane, London2022Ajker, Group Exhibition, Oitij-jo, London
2022 Degree Show, Central Saint Martins, 1 Granary Square, London


Press/Reviews



2024

The Purpose Was to Document the Other Side
on The White Pube by Zarina Muhammad


2024The Purpose Was to Document the Other Side: A Tale of Mediating Generational Gaps on
The Daily Star (BD) by Tasrifa Trisha




Writing


2023Time Is Moving At A Different Pace Back Home: Leaving Behind A Version Of Us, Small World City, Issue 01


Talk/Panel 



2024Joyful Lands, Joyful Bodies, Chronic Youth Film Festival, Barbican Centre

An Ode to All the Flavours, 2024


wood, mirror, low emf lights, artist’s father’s favourite childhood snack

180cm x 40cm x 90cm



    Inspired by the artist’s earliest memory of his father sharing his favourite childhood snack, the exhibition includes an interactive sculpture resembling an antique sodium-lit “Bangladeshi sweet shop” display counter. The modern versions of these are ubiquitously present throughout East London, where white fluorescents replace the nostalgic incandescent yellow.

    The sculpture holds spice seasoned fried gram flour flakes and fried chickpea flour balls soaked in sugar syrup - the two ingredients necessary to recreate the artist’s father’s beloved childhood snack. Visitors are invited to enjoy these delicacies by mixing one half with the other. The snacks are replenished daily.

















    Text by Laisul Hoque

    As far as memory recalls, moments of my father showing his emotional side to me are scant. Our interactions typically consist of my mother sporadically passing the phone to my father during our FaceTime calls. He inquires about my well-being, and expresses concerns about my life choices, instilling more anxiety and existential dread in me. The conversation often takes a turn into ridiculing questions about the length of my hair or the presence of facial hair, delivered with a steady tone of disappointment. In response, I either lack a satisfying answer or offer silence. The interaction usually concludes with him saying, "Alright, talk to your mother," before handing the phone back to her. These exchanges oscillate between silence and heated arguments in defence of my agency and autonomy.

    However, there is a memory from my childhood that stands out. During a visit to our grandparents, my father decided to take me on a walk through the village market, offering a glimpse into his upbringing. He led me to a sodium-lit sweet shop and proposed trying his favourite childhood snack: Jhuri Bundiya. This unfamiliar treat combined two separate snacks— Jhuri, spice-seasoned fried gram flour flakes and Boondi, small balls of fried chickpea flour soaked in sugar syrup. It was a revelation—a snack that was simultaneously salty, savoury, spicy, and sweet. I didn't know such flavour combinations were allowed.

    As we walked back, I held his hand, overwhelmed with gratitude for letting me experience that part of his childhood. Much like the flavours, I imagined that his childhood must have been complex. But much like him, I didn’t express anything. The thought of being emotional with him scared me, partly because I was too young, and mostly because articulating these emotions felt too complicated. The image of nostalgic yellow light, the sensation of experiencing new flavours for the first time, and his smile remain vivid in the back of my mind. It was an offering from him to me, an image I visualized as paternal love. An experience I wish others could savour.

    Throughout my upbringing, the statements I heard the most were: 'Don’t stray from norms and traditions,' 'Always try to fit in,' and 'What will people say?' The person I heard this from the most was my father. Yet, his favourite childhood snack is something unconventional.

    In the aura surrounding this work are silent conversations on paternal love, patriarchy’s effect on contemporary masculinity, queer materialism in conservative cultures, and silence as both a form of resilience and a mode of protest.
















    The exhibition was held at Kobi Nazrul Centre, from 7th to 11th of August 2024, as part of South Asian Heritage Month.

    Supported by

    Tower Hamlets Council

    South Asian Heritage Month UK

    Brady Arts Centre

    Tamarind Theatre Co.

    Oitij-jo

    Food provided by 

    Oitij-jo Kitchen



    I don’t Call Enough But I’m Here Now, 2024


    a solo exhibition by Laisul Hoque, curated by Jannat Hussain



      Held at Republic, the exhibition features four recent works spanning film, installation, sound, photography, and performance documentation.Through these works, Laisul explores interpersonal and intergenerational communication. The works carry reflective examinations, emphasizing the pursuit of honesty, catharsis, and connection.They offer a poignant view of vulnerability within family and self-understanding, navigating the enduring gaps presented by immigration, bilingual upbringing, and Bengali culture.







      Exhibition view of The Purpose Was to Document the Other Side (2023)

      The Purpose Was to Document the Other Side is a short film by Laisul Hoque, capturing the artist’s mother’s journey to London. The film is recorded on a camera initially purchased by the artist’s father in 2004 to document his European journey when he couldn’t bring his family along. Informed by the exploration of intimate conversation, the film compares the artist’s upbringing with that of his mother, addressing generational trauma and confronting emotional distance from his father. Through this documentary, the artist engages in the powerful act of curating their narrative together—vulnerable and emotional. It presents a compelling example of reclaiming personal and familial stories in the face of external threats.

      By deciding to record and hold these footages in the camera that his father used, the artist gives his mother a space to place her narrative, where originally it would be only his father’s and the artist’s. At the end of the film, the artist hands the camera to his mother, providing her with a means to contribute to the narrative. This action also serves as a nod to Cinematography by Runa Islam, the inaugural film/artwork where intertextuality was incorporated into the camera movement.












      Exhibition view of How to Translate a Proverb (2023)


      This work is composed of performance video documentation and an audio recording device. In the chest of drawers sits the recording device holding a compilation of conversations between the artist and his friends.

      Four drawers are pulled out, indicating the four years of Laisul’s artistic practice present in the space. The top drawer holds the essay providing insights on the performance and instructions for using the audio device.

      In How to Translate a Proverb (2023) the audience saw the entirety of your body in the space as you exerted yourself, breaking into a sweat. Scored by the audio recordings of the conversations, the documentation involved instructing the curator to use a camcorder tethered to a projector, directing the audience’s gaze to your forehead and your feet. So, what we see in this show is essentially something you extracted from the live performance that took place on that day. In a way, it feels like you made yourself the proverb.

      - Excerpt from exhibition text: A conversation between Laisul and Jannat.










      Exhibition view of I Wish I Could Tell You Exactly How I Feel (fluorescent tubes x2, coated in heat-sensitive paint, 2022)


      The heat from the fluorescent lights causes the paint to disappear—revealing the original tube when turned on, and slowly turning black as they cool down when turned off.

      The work is inspired by the artist’s inability to openly communicate with his family.

      That’s where visible light and heat came into play… I noticed how the black ink was the darkest at the start of the day, and throughout the day, the light bulb gets lighter and lighter. It never goes back to the blackness it had at the start of the day. And I find that to be metaphorical of progress and how we see relationships.

      - Excerpt from exhibition text: A conversation between Laisul and Jannat.


      Exhibition view of Untitled, Dhaka (giclee print on archival paper, aluminium framed, 2019)




      The Purpose was to Document the Other Side, 2023 

      Digital Video, 15 mins


      Press


      The White Pube

      The Daily Star (Bd)
      •       A short film by Laisul Hoque, capturing the artist's mother's journey to London. The film is recorded on a camera initially purchased by the artist's father in 2004 todocument his European journey when he couldn't bring his family along. Informed by the exploration of intimate conversation, the film compares the artist's upbringing with that of his mother, addressing generational trauma and confronting emotional distance from his father. Through this documentary, the artist engages in the powerful act of curating their narrative together—vulnerable and emotional. It presents a compelling example of reclaiming personal and familial stories.

      •       By deciding to record and hold these footages in the camera that the artist’s dad used, the artist gives his mother a space to place her narrative, where originally it would be only his father’s and the artist's. At the end of the film, the artist hands the camera to his mother, providing her with a means to contribute to the narrative. 





      Screening view of The Purpose Was to Document the Other Side at Barbican Cinema 2, 2024






      Screening view of The Purpose Was to Document the Other Side at Zéruì, 2024