Agnese Taurina is a London based, Latvian conceptual graphic designer and graduate of Central St Martins. Her strong nostalgic aesthetic encompasses Indian philosophy, Oriental and Ancient Greek art and design. Taurina challenges and discusses political issues within her visual story telling by exploring how we use technology to dominate nature.
Nikki is a graphic designer based in Melbourne. She likes to capture small moments, dream palettes and things that may otherwise go unnoticed. She also photographs a lot of trees.
Dominique White weaves together the theories of Black Subjectivity, Afro-pessimism and Afro-futurism with the nautical myths of Black Diaspora into a term she defines as the Shipwreck(ed); a reflexive verb and state of being.
Daantje Bons is a Dutch Fine Art photographer who uses provocation & humour to explore views of gender, femininity's ideal image, simulacrum & expectation.
Francesca’s work narrows in on the delicate period between adolescence and womanhood, focussing on a sense of belonging, friendship and ideas of hedonism in an all female utopia.
Dominik Zarowny & Fabio Coverini have been collaborating for the last year to present their first exhibition DJAGO – a city in turmoil - A series of mixed-media work exploring the struggles of a society revolting against the controlling rulers. The exhibition is on 14th June 2018 at Grow Tottenham.
Duncan Poulton is a British artist working with appropriated digital video and computer-generated imagery. His works observe, deconstruct and reconfigure found online content in order to form new associations between images and their authors’ original context of production. His practice is invested in the knowing misapplication of established techniques and formal strategies, the productive misinterpretation of existing cultural content. Though each work is discrete and contained within an internal logic, all share a concern with mythology, art history and the peculiarities of an increasingly virtual world.
Jamey Hoag was born and raised in California. He currently resides in Los Angeles. A self taught photographer he has a family, a job, sits in traffic and makes photographs mostly for creative and therapeutic purposes.
Ruby Bateman's work is ‘born from love and loss’, critically explores notions of institutionalised motherhood, personal narrative, conflicting desires and the concept of being a ‘free woman’.