Gallery Oldham hosts You Get Me? An exhibition by Mahtab Hussain explores the critical question of identity among young working-class British Asian men. The 24 portraits examine how the weight of masculinity impacts the subject’s sense of self. Showing until Saturday 8 June.
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.
Phil Barton's The Oxford Road Murders is a postal work documenting the destruction of over 120 mature trees along the Oxford Road Corridor between April 2015 and March 2018. Each postcard he produces contains photographic documentation of the murder: the location and date, along with a website link to a site highlighting the value of urban trees. Join Phil for one of his three guided walks in memoriam. More →
This is an exhibition of commissioned works by the Scott Creative Arts Foundation Artists in Residence: photographer Lucy Saggers and writer Peter Spafford. The work is a response by the artists to their time at SCAF, immersed in the world of Michael and Eileen Scott. More →
Loved&Lost is a documentary project by Manchester-based artist Simon Bray that invites participants to explore their experience of loss. Each participant is asked to find a photograph of themselves with their lost loved one. We return to the location of the original photograph to replicate the image and record an interview. More →
On Thursday 25 April, the students will be hosting their pop up exhibition in the gallery, and will also be joined by Twitter phenomenon @coldwar_steve. Described as a 'modern-day Hogarth', he has been a source of inspiration for this project, and he will be doing a live demo of how he creates his signature digital collages. More →
Martin Parr shows how the lives of Mancunians have changed but also reveals how there is continuity in how we live our lives. More →
Based in Derby's Eagle Centre Market, Derby Photo Fringe brings together exhibitions, workshops and events from emerging artists, collectives and established practitioners. As part of that, The Invisible In-Between: An Englishman's Search for the Irish Border looks at Ireland’s border in the uncertainty of Brexit. More →
Sweet Debris is a group exhibition featuring new and existing photographs and objects by four rising early career artists who find common inspiration in the cultural, social and visual detritus left in the wake of modern life. More →
Arpita Shah's Nalini is an ongoing series of work that focuses on her mother, her grandmother and herself. It explores the intimacy between the three of them and how their histories, memories and physical bodies are entangled and connected to one another. More →








