Latest Work
Latest Editorial, Portrait & Commercial Photography Projects
A selection of my most recent commissions and ongoing projects.
The work shown here spans editorial assignments, portrait commissions, documentary projects and commercial photography for organisations and publishers. It reflects current areas of focus and the range of contexts in which I am working.
New projects are added regularly.
Recent projects span commercial photography, event photography, and portrait photography, reflecting a mix of editorial, cultural and organisational commissions across different sectors and environments.
Delaine Le Bas: Un-Fair-Ground Exhibition Photography at The Whitworth
At the opening of Un-Fair-Ground at The Whitworth in Manchester, artist Delaine Le Bas transformed the gallery into an immersive environment using layered textiles, painted slogans, and fairground imagery. The exhibition is designed to be experienced as a single, cohesive space rather than a series of separate works, inviting visitors to engage with themes of visibility, representation, and resistance.
At the opening of Un-Fair-Ground at The Whitworth in Manchester, artist Delaine Le Bas transformed the gallery into an immersive environment using layered textiles, painted slogans, and fairground imagery. The exhibition is designed to be experienced as a single, cohesive space rather than a series of separate works, inviting visitors to engage with themes of visibility, representation, and resistance.
The Un-Fair-Ground Mural
The centerpiece of the exhibition is the large-scale mural Un-Fair-Ground, originally created for Glastonbury Festival and reworked for The Whitworth. Its bold graphic style and dramatic lettering create a sense of spectacle while provoking reflection on social and cultural visibility. Photography captured the scale and intricacy of the mural, emphasizing how the work dominates the gallery space and anchors the exhibition’s narrative.
Witch House and Domestic Resistance
Another significant work, Witch House, incorporates wallpaper and stitched phrases to reframe domestic space as a site of resistance. Photography highlights the layered textures, hand-crafted details, and the way Le Bas uses domestic motifs to explore complex social commentary.
Performance and Shared Experience
During the opening evening, performance elements brought the exhibition to life, shifting the atmosphere and drawing audiences together. Photography captured these moments of interaction, reinforcing the exhibition’s focus on shared experience and the dynamic relationship between art, space, and visitor engagement.
Exhibition Details
Delaine Le Bas: Un-Fair-Ground is on display at The Whitworth, Manchester until 31 May. Visitors can experience a thought-provoking combination of textile art, murals, and performance that challenges traditional notions of visibility, community, and representation.
Cloud Studies by Forensic Architecture
Photographs from the excellent new exhibition Cloud Studies by Forensic Architecture currently showing at Whitworth Art Gallery as part of Manchester International Festival.
https://forensic-architecture.org/investigation/cloudstudies
‘Cloud Studies’ was made for the exhibition Critical Zones: Observatories for earthly politics at ZKM Centre for Art and Media in Karlsruhe. Alongside the physical exhibition, our work is also presented on the virtual exhibition platform.
Event Photography: Cloud Studies by Forensic Architecture | Whitworth Art Gallery, Manchester
I recently photographed the opening of Cloud Studies by Forensic Architecture, currently on display at Whitworth Art Gallery as part of the Manchester International Festival. The exhibition presents a powerful investigation into the politics, dynamics, and consequences of toxic clouds, from chemical dispersals to herbicides and smoke, highlighting their impact on communities, environments, and urban spaces.
Cloud Studies was originally created for the exhibition Critical Zones: Observatories for Earthly Politics at ZKM Centre for Art and Media in Karlsruhe. Alongside the physical installation, the project is also accessible via the virtual exhibition platform, offering multiple perspectives on how clouds, both literal and metaphorical, shape and are shaped by social and political forces.
Photographing the Exhibition Opening
Documenting exhibitions like Cloud Studies requires attention to detail, context, and the conceptual framing of the work. At the opening, I captured the interaction between visitors and the installation, as well as moments from the curatorial introduction and discussions with the artists. Photography in this context provides a professional record for press, marketing, and digital archives, while also helping audiences engage with the critical and often challenging themes of the work.
In exhibitions addressing complex and politically charged subject matter, event photography plays a key role in communicating the atmosphere of the exhibition, the scale and detail of the works, and the audience’s engagement with them.
Understanding Cloud Studies
Forensic Architecture’s Cloud Studies investigates the mobilization of toxic clouds across scales, durations, and geographies. Tear gas is used to disperse crowds in protests, white phosphorus and chlorine gas are deployed in cities to spread terror, herbicides are sprayed from airplanes to displace populations, and fires are set to erase forests for industrial plantations. These clouds, deployed by state and corporate powers, demonstrate the entanglement of environmental and political violence.
The project challenges traditional forms of analysis by highlighting that “every contact leaves a trace.” Clouds are not only transformations of air, smoke, and chemicals—they are dynamic systems governed by complex, nonlinear, and multi-causal processes. Forensic Architecture traces these invisible dynamics, making the intangible visible and measurable.
Photography as a Record of Critical and Experimental Art
Professional photography is essential for exhibitions that operate at the intersection of art, research, and activism. In Cloud Studies, capturing the installation, its visual elements, and audience interaction helps convey the conceptual depth and urgency of the work. Photography preserves both the formal qualities of the artwork and the experiential response of the visitors, providing a lasting record for the artists, the gallery, and future audiences.
Photographs of installations like Cloud Studies also help bridge physical and virtual experiences, allowing online audiences to understand the spatial, visual, and political dimensions of the work.
The Epistemological Dimension of Clouds
Historically, clouds have posed challenges for painters and artists, often moving faster than artistic techniques could capture. Today, toxic and politically charged clouds operate on both physical and epistemological levels. Climate denial, chemical attacks, and industrial pollution create uncertainty and confusion, requiring new ways to observe, document, and respond.
Cloud Studies positions the viewer in relation to these dynamics, and through photography, we can translate the abstract and diffuse nature of clouds into a visible, comprehensible form. Images document how audiences experience the installation and how the exhibition communicates critical insights about environmental and political crises.
Conclusion
Photographing Cloud Studies at Whitworth Art Gallery allowed me to capture the intersections of art, research, and social investigation central to Forensic Architecture’s work. These images provide a professional record of an exhibition that interrogates how clouds—chemical, environmental, and epistemological—shape our world, and how art can make these forces visible, tangible, and actionable.