The Forest
Began in late summer 2015, The Forest is a conscious departure from masculinity and modernity, both in medium and in subject matter. My subjects are my contemporaries, from my global community of young artists using their bodies for self-expression, uniquely connected in the digital age through social media. Recent puritanical legislation around the globe has inhibited how we connect and share our work, but we continue to create undeterred.
Being from the same community we are allowed an immediate level of familiarity and intimacy that other (typically male) artists aren’t privy to. We are nude, but it is an unselfconscious and primordial nudity, reclaimed from the male gaze and with a softness and intimacy to the images rarely captured in a male lens. We are in nature and a part of it; we aren’t conquerors of the natural world, we are skyclad witches and exultant earth goddesses in communion with nature, vulnerable yet unafraid. We remain people, as unique and individual as the forest itself, not anonymous figures bereft of identity. We are willing collaborators and active participants, captured with the ritual alchemy of analogue photography.


Dovile Paris, 2018



Jacs Fishburne, 2015

Rosetta Carr, 2019

Kyotocat, 2018

Manya Muse, 2018

Milly Harding, 2019

Kyotocat & Jordanlehn, 2016

Grace Jessica, 2018

Elle Peril, 2016

Self, 2019

Honey Dear, 2017


Lana Helena, 2019

Sugar Magnohlia, 2016

Kelsey Dylan, 2019

Brooke Eva, 2017

Minh-Ly, 2016

Jordanlehn, 2016

Romi Muse, 2015

Kyotocat, 2016

Sura Hertzberg, 2018

Rose McKenzie, 2017

Julia Monae, 2019

Lillias Right, 2015

Marine, 2015

Angie Marie, 2017

Blath, 2015

Kelsey Dylan, 2017

Self, 2015


Ali & Devin, 2017
The timelessness of the setting is complemented by the medium; black and white film, processed and printed by hand. The final prints are not airbrushed, drawing attention to the tactile and physical qualities of the images as objects, in an age where photography is everywhere yet mostly incorporeal and ephemeral. The texture of the film grain echoes the unadulterated skin textures; the irregularities of analogue processes reflecting the natural imperfections of we the subjects and the environment.
The images of The Forest are an expression of freedom, defiance, community and of liberation of spirit, continuing a tradition stretching back generations.