
Somewhere in Africa
Brigitte Bourger
Figures in motion - from a series on lives by the sea.
@brigittebourgerAn evolving visual archive of works that inspire us with their presence and perspective.
Brigitte Bourger
Figures in motion - from a series on lives by the sea.
@brigittebourgerAlvin Ng
Inspired by Ovid's Book of Days, Alvin's works suggest a hidden magic beneath the surface of our everyday world. Each image invites us to go beyond the surface, where ancient wisdom and myths speak through contemporary vision.
@alvinnzhVakho Khetaguri
From the series Tbilisi to Siem Reap, capturing moments of quiet observation and cultural intersection.
@vakhokhetaguri0Murray Ballard
A wreck of a migrant boat in Salento, southern Italy. From Ballard's series Ghosts in the Field, exploring how the region is being reshaped by an ecological crisis, tourism, and old local folklore, this work speaks to today's societal issues where leisure and crisis can sit alongside each other.
@murrayballardKim Woo Young
The desert in cold light. An uneasy relationship between the fleeting and the permanent, the natural and the human.
@kimwooyoung_comYimin Chen
Teoswa is a journey into the ancestral echoes of his mother's hometown - the Teochew region of Guangdong - and an intimate search for the meaning of "home."
@eindchanMahmoud Khatab
"I spent a day at the Egyptian museum, where it hosted the royal mummies for the last day, forever, before being carried in a parade into another museum, to be shown and scrutinised."
@somewhereincairoOrestis Ilias
Raw marble from Pedeli's Quarry outside Athens - source of the Parthenon. Here it sits, ready to rebuild the city.
@orestis.iliasClaudia Fuggetti
Inspired by the notion that the ecological crisis is a crisis of perception, of how we experience the world around us. Metamorphosis invites us to reconsider our relationship with nature and to experience it as a living entity.
@lafuggClaire Amaouche
Of All The Wild Paths speaks to our relationship with ourselves and the landscape. Even in the wilderness there is evidence of those who came before. Through painted silhouettes Claire traces that connection between us, the landscape, and our predecessors. Her figures appear - almost ghostly - hinting at the ethereal connection between past and present.
@maoucha