Mahtab Hussain: What Did You Want to See?
20th March 2025 – 1st June 2025
Ikon Gallery
1 Oozells Square, Brindley Place
Birmingham B1 2HS
Ikon presents a solo exhibition, What Did You Want To See? by British artist Mahtab Hussain (20 March – 1 June 2025). Hussain explores the fine line between photographic documentation and surveillance culture, addressing the intelligence sites established by the media and the state to monitor the Muslim community in Britain.
Commissioned by Ikon and Photoworks, the exhibition features new work, including Hussain’s systematic documentation of 160 Birmingham mosques, revealing the diversity of mosque architecture; portraits of Birmingham residents which highlight the city’s vibrant Muslim community; a communal space within the gallery aimed at fostering inclusion and intercultural dialogue; and What Did You Want To See? an installation simulating a site under surveillance.
During the summers of 2023 and 2024, Hussain, who was raised in Birmingham, systematically photographed the city’s mosques, capturing 160 in total. Displayed in a 16 x 10 grid, the installation offers an architectural typology reminiscent of works by German artists Hilla and Bernd Becher. The collection reveals the diversity of mosque architecture, from the iconic domes and minarets of Birmingham’s Central Mosque to the Arts & Crafts designs of terraced houses and yellow brick churches. Each photograph stands unique, resisting singular interpretation and analysis. Collectively, they underscore the pervasive act of data collection and classification.
Following his previous photographic series You Get Me? (2008-2017) and Honest With You (2008-2018), which visualised the experiences of British South Asian men and women, Hussain’s latest work presents portraits of Birmingham residents. Produced in 2024, these black and white portraits highlight the vibrant diversity of Birmingham’s Muslim community.
The individuals in the portraits gaze back — one individual is formally dressed in traditional clothing, while another is pictured in his car mechanic’s attire. A further portrait shows a woman holding a cigarette, her elbow propped up by her other hand, while she stares ahead; another depicts a daughter with her arms around her elderly mother, the patterns and texture of their outfits expressive even in monochrome. Hussain’s lens captures the intersectionality of his subjects, embracing their individuality and avoiding stereotypical representations.
Hussain’s installations create a communal space within the gallery, fostering inclusion, care and intercultural dialogue. A carpeted room features a video of five prayer sequences, inviting visitors to join or observe as they choose. Another installation, titled An Act of Civil Declaration (2025), is a series of statements that confront the harmful stereotypes and prejudiced labels that the Muslim community has faced.
Two additional videos, created in collaboration with novelist, playwright and video artist Guy Gunaratne, explore the Muslim experience in Britain. They celebrate community activities, sports and social gatherings while also reflecting on Hussain’s personal journey growing up in Birmingham. Another video features actor, poet and playwright Azan Ahmed sharing the act of daily prayer and its meaning. These installations highlight the richness of the British Muslim community’s heritage and the artist’s intimate connection to his hometown.
Throughout the building, interventions such as post code tagging — a form of graffiti — serve as an act of defiance, transforming the walls into a shared map, signalling belonging, community ties and collective memory. In contrast, the gradual removal of Project Champion surveillance cameras from Birmingham’s streets in 2011 left behind visual remnants in the form of strange tarmac patches dotting the pavements.
Repurposed in Ikon Gallery, the patches are reminders and witnesses to a contentious chapter in urban governance, bearing the memory of tension between security and freedom, and a reminder of community resilience and vigilance. “Through my work, I strive to reflect the richness and resilience of Muslim communities, celebrating their individuality while challenging stereotypes. Each portrait and installation is a story, an invitation to connect, and a reminder of the beauty in our shared humanity.” Mahtab Hussain
This exhibition is commissioned by Ikon and Photoworks and supported by the John Feeney Charitable Trust and Freelands Foundation.
Mahtab Hussain: What Did You Want to See? opens on the 20th of March 2025 until the 1st of June, 2025 at Ikon Gallery
©2024 Ikon Gallery