Sabrina Tirvengadum, Beauty Fall – Coming Soon

29 APR 2026
Free and all welcome
SPACE Ilford

SPACE Gallery presents Beauty Fall, the solo exhibition by deaf British Mauritian artist Sabrina Tirvengadum.

Opening on 29th April 2026, the exhibition turns the gallery into a satirical beauty salon. Visitors will find AI-generated beauty ads, a face-morphing mirror and installations exposing colonial influences on algorithmic beauty standards.

On her sixth birthday, Sabrina wished to be pretty, aspiring to lighter skin and straighter hair to look less like herself. These early experiences, shaped by colonial beauty standards, now echo in today’s algorithmic definitions of beauty.

Beauty Fall explores how idealised beauty standards, shaped by Western industry and social media, impact self-esteem and distort identity. Marginalising people across identities and appearances, these systems challenge visitors to question how beauty is measured and whether it can be reclaimed today.

The exhibition reveals aspects of beauty culture that are typically concealed. Advertisements are presented with their underlying messages exposed, and beauty products are labelled to expose their true impact. Central to the exhibition is a series of works that encourage visitors to confront their own reflections.

Sabrina’s exploration of measurement is grounded in personal and ancestral history. She has worked with archival family photographs to trace how colonial documentation recorded, categorised, and often erased those it claimed to represent. 3D-printed beauty masks of the artist’s grandparents are displayed in the space, serving as witnesses to ancestors and communities deliberately excluded.

For Beauty Fall, she creates an ideal AI version of herself to prompt a generative AI model. Pressure to conform to set beauty standards can lead us to alter or hide our features, risking a loss of connection to both ourselves, our sense of identity, and our ancestors. Reclaiming our reflection restores this connection and resists erasure, and the exhibition encourages visitors to value traits inherited from their ancestors that beauty culture often seeks to erase.

 


 

Sabrina Tirvengadum is a deaf British Mauritian visual artist and graphic designer based in London. She holds a BA (Hons) in Photographic Arts from the University of Westminster. Her work focuses on identity, memory and ancestral history, using photography, collage, AI and digital painting. She has exhibited at venues like the Attenborough Arts Centre and Autograph. Sabrina is the founder of We’re All Human and was selected for the 2025 Autograph x Light Work residency.

Website: https://sabrina.wereallhuman.uno/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/another_hellosabsab/