Installation shots from my first solo exhibition of See You Soon at Place M in Tokyo. I made a 1x21 metre continuous canvas scroll that wound its way along the gallery walls (splitting at points). The idea was to reference the linear narrative of the book I made of the work. I saw the photographs existing very much as a book, so when I was invited to exhibit by Atsushi Saito, I wanted to keep that story and reading as undisrupted as possible.
Installation photos by @lumberjack.inc
Very happy to announce that I am one of 4 winners of the @photofusionuk SELECT/26 award with my portrait of Trevor & Cherise from my Lee Green Lives project (selected by Holly-Marie Cato @h_cato 🙌). Along with @deepthimuralibabu Maura Mahon and Naomi Waddis, we will be showing our work as a group show in September this year, where I will be expanding on the wider project about Leegate Shopping Centre.
Thank you Photofusion and Holly-Marie!
Some spreads from my zine In Early Spring. Released June 2025 in an edition of 50 with hand cut cover. 56 pages, 40 colour photographs.
For the last five years I haven’t felt comfortable enough in myself to carry my camera around with me and take pictures intuitively like I used to. However, earlier in the year I experienced a change in my life which encouraged me to respond to my everyday surroundings with my camera, with a desire to express and explore new found friendships and a shift in mindset. I have felt more inclined to stop thinking about the meaning of things, letting go and allowing my emotional reaction be the reason to take pictures. ‘In Early Spring’ is a commemoration of that period of time, a contemplation on new and existing relationships, and finding meaning in thinking less about meaning!
I’ve been a season ticket holder at Charlton Athletic for over 25 years. I started going with my friend Jack and his family, we sat in the F block North stand, row A. One day Jack’s Mum couldn’t go, so my Mum took her ticket. From that day my Mum found a new passion, and has had a season ticket ever since. When the north stand upper tier was built, we dispersed and my Mum and I moved seats to block E row AA (front row) to sit together. I had a period of time when I rarely went to games, but my Mum kept going on her own. I’ve now come to enjoy going to games mainly to spend time with my Mum, it’s more about that than the game a lot of the time. I would take my camera sometimes, but only in the last year I’ve made more of a conscious decision to take pictures.
Here are a handful of pictures I took this season.
@cafcofficial@downsy27@lowerblock_
Milk!
A KALTBLUT exclusive.
Photographer @maxwelljakeanderson
Model and styling @toddlamming
Words by Maxwell Anderson
Brands used: @ericnfriends@effenberger_couture@nike vintage leather
(models own)
“As part of an ongoing collaboration project between the two, ‘MILK’ explores the sexual and domestic tension between the photographer and his subject. Set within the quiet intimacy of a home, it is uncertain if
the photographs are a personal document or a collaborative performance, if the two are friends or lovers, whether they have known each other for one night or one decade."
/milk-by-maxwell-anderson-todd-lamming/
werbung unpaid
Unbearable Heaviness of Being
A short series of recent pictures about finding everyday life difficult and feeling stuck in one place physically and metaphysically… my fave subject.
Scans of laser prints on A4 90gsm paper.
All prints available for £2.50 each plus postage.
Open Edition
People On Their Phones, pt.1
20 years ago I used to spend a lot of time in central London, walking around, taking pictures, watching the world. I have a lot of photos from back then of people looking at maps. I recently had the urge to go to similar areas to pick up this ‘people looking at maps’ idea. Unfortunately I couldn’t find a single person looking at a map. But I was interested to see people taking up similar poses, but the maps had been replaced by phones. I feel like the phone obsession has kinda slowly crept up on us, we take it for granted that we are all on our phones all the time. But when you really look at it, it’s kinda scary. We are all being sucked in to this digital disconnection with the world around us. And it’s while sitting, walking, running, on the tube, on the escalator, on the move, waiting, selfies, maps, communication, entertainment… it kinda feels like some non physical being has got us pinned down and slowly absorbing us in to non existence. I mean, that’s where I am right this second, contributing to it, alone in my phone, not really engaging with anyone, and I don’t actually know why.