Natalia Lazaro Prevost
Lazaro Prevost explores historical depictions of the female reproductive anatomy, and its influence on how women perceive their body image.
Lazaro Prevost explores historical depictions of the female reproductive anatomy, and its influence on how women perceive their body image.
Shihui Gao draws on her personal story. It explores loneliness and the search for emotional understanding in a post-Internet era.
Can Shui is a Chinese visual artist and educator. Greeting From Strangers comprises twelve photographs, each recording a month in one year.
Alvaro Lopez Gimenez is a Spanish visual artist who experiments with gender and identity through video art and performance.
Across image and video, Mandy Williams examines the exclusionary politics of modern England through the metaphor of landscape.
Brian Bi is a Chinese artist born in Beijing, and currently based in London. He is interested in the living experience constructed by images.
Yura’s work shows her relationship with her grandmother and deals with the issues concerning senior citizens and their challenges in Korea.
Bart’s practice is situated within the intersections of fetishism, queerness, contemporary appearance, post-racial politics and neoliberalism.
Sofia Leppan is a visual artist based between Ibiza and London. Leppan creates video art, book design and photography of all kinds.
Renée Marie Kiangala’s practice is a contemporary critique of the involvement of surveillance studies in human development.
n00oodies is an interactive collaboration between artists and participants, exploring nude culture and the synthetic unreality of sex online.
Feeling as though women in cinema were often represented as one dimensional and unrealistic, Hardingham created self-portraits.
Maya Gurung-Russell Campbell is a Brixton-based artist who creates evocative landscapes that explore dual heritage in a wide range of mediums.
Lai Lam Fave is a Singaporean-born, London-based artist. Her works centre around the ideas of performance, satire and embodiment.
Jack Lumer was born in Milano in 1998, and grew up in New York. At the age of 16, he left home and moved to Brussels to develop his artistic identity.
Danielle Anderson’s images are filled with tension and ambiguity; they are unconscious repetitions, metaphors and expressions of emotion.
Through her work, Bella Cholmeley explores subjectivity, identity and human narrative. A journey into an ever-shifting, ambiguous dream.
Adam Roberts works between Glasgow and London. His multidisciplinary work queers the photographic medium through playful acts of trickery.
Touch Me Not is an ongoing exploration of the lack of touch and intimacy between couples who were kept apart during the lockdown.