Isolated Planes
Blurring the boundaries between photography, illustration and digital painting, Alex Fruehmann’s works offer alternate storylines.
Blurring the boundaries between photography, illustration and digital painting, Alex Fruehmann’s works offer alternate storylines.
New York-based May Parlar is a photography and video artist creating visual narratives that explore the notion of identity and belonging.
Utilising peculiar perspectives, Sharon Alviz invites viewers to consider architectural compositions and our wider relations to them.
Ward Roberts draws upon the effects of loneliness and isolation in today’s world. His Flotsam series builds upon repetition, acclimatisation and reverie.
Michael Schwan’s mission to explore lost places in Europe is rooted in the idea of the urban explorer, looking behind closed doors.
From nearby urban neighbourhoods in Paris to desert landscapes in the American West, Edouard Sepulchre’s images capture prairie-like idealism.
Rusty Wiles is a Florida native, who serves as a firefighter and paramedic. Five years ago, he downloaded Instagram and began to shoot.
Dylan Lewis is a photographer from Richmond, Virginia. Addressing themes of loneliness in the 21st century, the images express a sense of longing.
After delving into commercial photography, Matthew Dempsey looked towards creating original work with draws a line between artifice and fine art.
Luke Evans discovered photography through a long-term interest in physics and organic sciences – which has later fed into deeply calculative images.
Henri Prestes is a Portuguese cinematographer and photographer based in southern Europe. The Perfect Darkness series was shot in isolated villages.
Much of Christopher Soukup’s work is centred around creating a specific mood – one which depicts a scene somewhere between calm and tension.
Tyler Haughey’s images examine the north eastern coastal towns, looking at the ways in which we use, interactive with and remember summer locations.
Living and working in San Francisco, Colin Pollard’s pop-coloured projects revel in pastel compositions and deceptive block landscapes.
Over the past seven years, Dan Matthews has developed a uniquely graphic and cropped aesthetic that conjures a sense of the surreal.
Reuben Wu is a photographer, filmmaker and music producer whose visual work is driven by the urge to explore new places as if they were unknown.
Andrea Clarke is wholly interested in the spaces that surround us, questioning the confines that they offer and the anonymity attached to home.
Capturing the everyday landscape, Vishal Marapon’s images connect with changing cities and the material effects of gentrification and development.
Lonneke van der Palen’s practice focuses on creating artificial sets. Highly stylised, the images focus on nature of circulated media and constructed realities.