A survey exhibition of photography, including work by:
Michele Abeles
L. Raphael Agbodjélou
Olaf Breuning
Jonny Briggs
Broomberg & Chanarin
Elina Brotherus
Anders Clausen
Mat Collishaw
JH Engström
Mitch Epstein
Andreas Gefeller
Luis Gispert
Daniel Gordon
Noémie Goudal
Katy Grannan
Matthew Day Jackson
Chris Levine
Matt Lipps
Ryan McGinley
Mohau Modisakeng
Laurel Nakadate
Sohei Nishino
David Noonan
Marlo Pascual
Mariah Robertson
Phoebe Rudomino
Hannah Sawtell
David Benjamin Sherry
Berndnaut Smilde
Meredyth Sparks
Hannah Starkey More →
Exhibitions
We regret to announce that after 26 years of supporting photographers and championing photography throughout the UK, Redeye, the Photography Network will wind down on 31 July 2024 due to a number of factors, including lack of funding. Read our full statement here. We are no listing exhibitions. The archive of past exhibitions is available below.
- Log in to post comments
How do you capture someone's spirit? The spirit of a community? Of a culture, a country?
These are just some of the questions that the six photographers who have contributed to this exhibition – all of whom come from refugee backgrounds – have been grappling with in the course of Scottish Refugee Council's Spirit photography project produced in partnership with Street Level Photoworks. The project was born from a desire to tell stories about the refugee experience from the people best qualified to do so – refugees themselves. More →
- Log in to post comments
Peter Fraser has created a new photographic portrait of London.
A City in the Mind takes its inspiration from Italo Calvino’s novel Invisible Cities in which the explorer Marco Polo tells the Emperor Kublai Khan of the many fantastical cities he has visited on his travels. However, Marco Polo and the Emperor don’t speak the same language so the explorer uses objects from the cities to help tell their story. Similarly Fraser’s enigmatic photographs of London can be read as portals to another world, openings onto stories and histories, even other civilizations. More →
- Log in to post comments
Final year students at Staffordshire University are showcasing a new and exciting photographic exhibition INVISO (IN-VEE-SO), at both Staffordshire University and at Cube in Manchester. The exhibition will be the culmination of three years of study and features a diverse range of student work while at University. Presenting imagery from thirty-one graduates all with different ideas and viewpoints about photography. More →
- Log in to post comments
2012 will see Manchester School of Art's latest photography alumni take their current eclectic collection of final year pieces to London for a one-week exhibition. This will be the first time this course has exhibited in the South.
The exhibition Manchester to London will host a vast collection from 25 artists whose work spans through various themes, exploring portraiture, still life, architecture, documentary and fashion. More →
- Log in to post comments
A Beautiful Catastrophe is an exhibition of street photography from New York photographer Bruce Gilden which has been previously unseen in the UK.
The exhibition features Gilden’s trademark style of confrontational and highly energetic street photography, capturing the characters and eccentricities on the streets of New York City since 1981.
The exhibition has a launch event when Bruce will be coming over from the States to give a talk about the exhibition on 14 May. More →
- Log in to post comments
Identity Crisis is a photography exhibition by Helen McGhie, who
explores ideas surrounding identity and sense of place.
Much of her work appropriates existing visual documents in order to provoke the viewer’s understanding of codes within familiar imagery. More →
- Log in to post comments
Illume is the group show of the final year students on the Foundation Degree in Contemporary Photography at Mid Cheshire College. The exhibition marks the end of a two-year exploration of photography and showcases the personal final projects of the group.
The work on display illustrates an array of subject areas and covers a wide range of photographic genres such as documentary, fine art, landscape and portraiture. A variety of media have been used to create the images on show, including traditional photographic film, digital capture, still and moving images, colour and black and white. More →
- Log in to post comments
What does 1984 look like? Is Big Brother watching you on CCTV? Documentary photographer David Dunnico asks you these questions in this two-part exhibition.
For a number of years, Dunnico has documented the rise of CCTV surveillance in a series of graphic black and white images, looking at those who operate it, sell it and oppose it. Alongside this, he has also built up a collection of editions and ephemera about George Orwell's 1984 – the book’s changing covers tell how every new generation of readers finds Orwell's work frighteningly relevant to their own times. More →
- Log in to post comments
Canadian photographer Edward Burtynsky has travelled the world to chronicle the effect of oil on all our lives, and to reveal the rarely seen mechanics of its production and distribution.
This exhibition shows three sections from Burtynsky’s series OIL: Extraction and Refinement, Transportation and Motor Culture and The End of Oil. The works depict landscapes scarred by the extraction of oil, and the cities and suburban sprawl defined by its use. He also eloquently addresses the coming end of oil, as we face its rising cost and dwindling availability. More →
- Log in to post comments



