Photography
Thomas Dorrington
A key message of the day was on climate justice and the class war that climate change threatens: those that have contributed least to the problem will suffer the most, and are in fact already suffering. The day of disruption sought to highlight the far greater disruption already faced by countries around the world as a result of the UK’s financial sector and UK backed companies.
Hailey Sadler
This essay focuses on individual portraiture of a generation born amidst this intricate, ever-changing, socio-political environment - an environment our generation is currently attempting to navigate. It is important to note, however, that these children are not ‘faces of the refugee crisis’. These children are just children. Tiny, individual humans, caught up through no fault of their own, in a complex reality of a world in flux.
Trevor Cole
His photography focuses predominantly on culture and landscapes; images which reflect a spatial and temporal journey through life, and which try to convey a need to live in a more sustainable world. He seeks the moment and the light in whatever context he finds himself and endeavours to use his photographic acumen to turn the ordinary into the extraordinary.
William Keo
This work is not about morality, but about examining truth. I am interested in the complexity of these relationships because on one hand, the Janjaweed are men with the same fears and dreams as anyone else, even though they are the militia of the Khartoum government. It is important to show all dimensions humanity can occupy.
Juliette Chalant Devlesaver
After joining the Collecti.e.f 8 maars, I began to consciously analyse more and more the status of inferiority women occupy in conversations, public spaces, and even within our own homes. Women are never given the same amount of respect as men, nor the space to use their voice equally.
“When we fight for women’s rights, it’s not just for daily rights, it’s not just for equality, we are fighting for emancipation of women.”
Lola Massinon and Juliette Chalant Devlesaver
On the 24th of November 2019, 10,000 people took to the streets of Brussels to raise their voices in a march protesting violence against women, organised by the Mirabal collective and other organisations. A day full of enthusiastic energy, cohesion and anger, more people turned up than ever before to take a stand against discriminatory, institutionalised and systemic violence.