Sofia Karim (Liverpool, 1976) is a London-based British artist, human rights activist, and architect. Work from Karim's Turbine Bagh project is held in the collection of the Victoria and Albert Museum in London. Her activism focuses on human rights in Bangladesh and India, although has also included solidarity with Palestine through the project Architects for Palestine (AFP), which donates to Medical Aid for Palestinians (MAP).
Karim was born in Liverpool in the 1970s to Bangladeshi parents. She is the middle of three sisters. The family moved to Libya for her parents' work when she was an infant, returning to the UK when she was seven.
She has worked as an architect for over 20 years, including at Foster and Partners in London and at Peter Eisenman in New York City.
Karim's Turbine Bagh protest art project began in solidarity with the Muslim women of the 2019âÂÂ2020 Shaheen Bagh protest in Delhi, against the Indian government's Citizenship Amendment Act. Karim invites artists, writers and thinkers to send designs for samosa packets, which she prints and assembles. Typically these bags, which are used to wrap the popular South Asian snack, are made from old newspaperâÂÂa format which Turbine Bagh mimicks. The project has evolved into a platform that campaigns for the release of political prisoners in South Asia and raises awareness of human rights injustices across the world.
Her uncle is the photojournalist, social activist and educator Shahidul Alam.
Karim's work is held in the following permanent collection: