Alternate Views
John Baloyi has a distinct aesthetic, producing portraits through a surreal Afro-centric lens. He evokes alternative views of black expression.
John Baloyi has a distinct aesthetic, producing portraits through a surreal Afro-centric lens. He evokes alternative views of black expression.
Christo and Jeanne-Claude are remembered for wrapping the world’s landmarks in bold fabrics. A new exhibition opens at Paris’ Centre Pompidou.
A sense of urgency is prevalent in the works of this year’s graduating students at London College of Communication. These are agents of change.
In Dan Commons’ work, red flowers, shuttered windows and urban staircases are taken out of context, asking viewers to consider the narrative.
Anna Skahill’s current work takes an interest in the intersection between relationships, memory and the family presented through a variety of media.
Kaplan Urul’s series Orange is an expression of the individual, representing turmoil explored through the body language of its subject.
Emma Dunaud is a Paris based photographer. Her work is closely linked to psychology, with a therapeutic and psychoanalytical quality.
Andrew Little is a recent BA Photography graduate for University of the Arts London: London College of Communication.
Tami Aftab is a London based Photographer. Her work touches on subjects of intimacy, performance and playfulness through portraiture.
Rachel Gordon is a Scottish photographer. Lockdown enabled her to reassess her practice, resulting in the series The Fruit & The Flies.
Qiying Feng is a BA Photography graduate from the University of the Arts: London College of Communication.
Prim Patnasiri is an artist from Bangkok, Thailand, currently based in London and working in photography, video, installation.
Phoebe Somerfield’s On Fairly Solid Ground is a contemplation of feminine presence within landscape, using post-industrial backdrops.
Taking its name from the tale The Juniper Tree, the series Red as Blood, White as Snow navigates various themes explored in European folk literature.
Maite de Orbe is a photographer whose work focuses on gender, fashion, portraiture, and nature, through surrealism and the absurd.
James Greenhalgh’s The best part of me is youis a project of discovery, delving into his own identity as a man and modern ideas of masculinity.
India Tuersley’s original 9 Lives project was interrupted due to lockdown, so instead she turned to collage to create her work.
Holly de Looze’s work documents her understanding of gender roles within domestic environments, including subjects of intimacy and performance.
Dina Patey is a photographer and artist based between London and Oslo. She is a recent graduate of BA Photography at LCC.