Words of a Wrongly Convicted Person

This project explores the spreading of wrongful conviction awareness. Termaine Hicks served 19 years in prison for a crime he did not commit and during that time wrote the poem ‘Just Another Day’. Each line is located in a different area of Bristol, with a QR code to view/hear the complete poem.

 

Rianna Ngombe

Website: www.riannadesign.co.uk/

Modern Day Fears

A short animation looking modern day fears of society and how they have developed on from the more common ones like spiders or snakes. Illustrations drawn by hand and animated on Photoshop motion, then finished on Premier Pro.

 

Annabel Benoist

Website: www.annabelbenoist.com

You Can’t Have Your Cake & Eat It

Social media is dominating our everyday lives acting as a catalyst around the stigma of bodies and fat phobia. This is a constant issue with social platforms taking down diverse images and the algorithms only promoting the ‘conventional’ bodies. Diet culture is essentially societies acceptance for eating disorders, they encourage starvation, restrictive nutrition and many other unhealthy habits. Magazines promote this behaviour and idolise it through celebrity statuses. You Can’t Have Your Cake & Eat It is a series of art directed photography that exposes the toxic traits within the diet culture through a satirical narrative

 

Emilia Pavely

Website: www.emiliastudiodesigns.cargo.site

Vimeo: https://vimeo.com/user93457882

Merbabes Beach Throw 

A hand screen printed beach throw created as a celebration of community and togetherness of the Hele Bay Merbabes sea swimming group. The throw was created in response to voice notes collected from these women, the outcome represents sisterhood, and how the sea brings them together and helps to bring balance to their lives.

 

Imogen Hunter

Website: www.impyink.com

Demj

As someone who has travelled and lived in many countries, I have become a mix of cultures and identity has become attached to a sense of belonging, often through deep emotional connections.

I love being able to choose to be whoever I want, wherever I go. I’ve gradually built myself an identity that is a collection of pieces, each of which I’ve handpicked; choosing the best bits to create a whole. Being rootless doesn’t mean I don’t belong to any one place; it means I choose to belong to many.

Demj means fusion in Arabic. As a third culture individual, my roots are determined by people and connections. Each pendant is a preservation of language of the word root, from the cultures that make-up my identity.

 

Neasa Tubridy

Website: neasatubridy.myportfolio.com

Incredibly Eccentric

A magazine celebrating some of the world’s most eccentric people. Showing interviews with these unique individuals, the aim of the magazine is to empower everybody, not despite their diversity but because of it.

The magazine isn’t an attempt to normalise these individuals. Yes, they are eccentric, but they are also incredible! We should learn to share our similarities and celebrate our differences.

 

Rachel Bonner

Website: https://rachelbonner.co.uk/

 

Autumn 1888: Jack The Ripper

A book series surrounding the mystery of the infamous ‘Jack the Ripper’ murders of the late 19th Century.

Encased inside an embossed case, the collection is split into five parts that tell and represent each part of the story – including a lot of deeply researched details that are typically skipped over in many of the retellings.

I really wanted to play with interactive elements, printing methods and layout to give this story the creative spotlight it deserves.

 

Caitlin Damsell

Website: www.caitlindamsell.com