Chloë Louise Lawrence is a visual artist from Woolwich, South East London, graduating with an MA in Print from the Royal College of Art in 2019.
Through text, printmaking and sculpture, Chloë reflects on growing up in council housing and the transient nature of those spaces. She works through the feelings of loss, longing, and nostalgia - weaving those themes through a Working Class narrative.
Vulnerable slogans that highlight the sentimental value of time passed under rented roofs are paired with domestic artefacts and characters such as taps, interior surfaces or silverfish, and re-imagined in soap; subverting their permanence to serve as metaphors for the mundane, grief, and overlooked aspects of everyday life. Drawing inspiration from Sara Ahmed's exploration of unhappiness as a textured aspect of life, Chloë reworks feminised labour practices, emphasising reproductive and emotional work. Through the constant repetition of imagery in print and casting processes, the work functions as drafts, reproducing workaday images and objects while reflecting on the passage of time and collective histories. In her practice, unhappiness is not merely a lack of joy, but a nuanced expression, echoing the refusal and protest against the normative and feminised standard of happiness.