Personal Projects
Justice Isn’t Blind, She Just Isn’t Seeing Women
This ongoing project examines the gap between visibility and recognition within the UK justice system, particularly in cases of gender-based violence. Shot on medium format 120 film and digital, the work draws on feminist visual theory, fashion styling, and performance for camera to question how institutions claim neutrality while repeatedly misrecognising women who seek protection.
Through architectural scale, motion blur, and symbolic domestic materials, the series exposes the structural blind spots shaping women’s encounters with justice - visible, yet unheard.
Gel plate (gelli) prints extend the project’s material research, layering and distorting imagery to echo processes of fragmentation and erasure. Together, the works challenge the aesthetics of authority and turn scrutiny back onto the systems that fail to recognise women.
Photographed during the Million Women Rise protest in London and shot on 35mm black and white film.
The march brought thousands of women together in collective protest against male violence and the institutions that repeatedly fail to protect them. Women of all ages gathered in the streets, young girls, mothers, and older women, united by a shared refusal to remain silent. These photographs document moments within that movement: gestures, voices, and acts of solidarity that speak to both anger and resilience. The march becomes not only an act of protest, but a visible reminder of women rising together to demand safety, accountability, and change.