Anywhere but here
Anywhere but here
Anywhere but here
Anywhere but here
Anywhere but here
Anywhere but here
Anywhere but here
Anywhere but here
Anywhere but here
Anywhere but here
Anywhere but here
Anywhere but here
Anywhere but here
Anywhere but here
Anywhere but here
Anywhere but here
Anywhere but here
Anywhere but here
Anywhere but here
Anywhere but here
Anywhere but here
Anywhere but here
Anywhere but here
Anywhere but here

Anywhere but here

Regular price £40.00 Save Liquid error (snippets/product-template line 124): Computation results in '-Infinity'%
/
Shipping calculated at checkout.

Only 32 items in stock!
  • Photo Editions 2021
  • Softcover, 1st edition, 108pp
  • New

In anywhere but here, Alison McCauley expresses the restless feeling that has haunted her throughout her life: that the place she is in isn’t where she should be, and a conviction that the next place will be better. Taken from 2008 to present, these images—taken in various locations around the world—are a deeply personal reflection of the artist’s emotions, photography being a cathartic means of coming to terms with her constant desire to move. As someone who has always led a semi-nomadic lifestyle, McCauley seeks to explore the idea of not belonging. Though she feels like she is supposed to belong somewhere, McCauley doesn't want to, as she recognises that it is the wonder of this belonging that is the impetus behind her work.   

Devoid of geographical and temporal reference points, the images are figuratively and literally blurred to emphasise that this is not about a location or time, but rather a state of mind. For the viewer the series takes on a narrative of its own, unfolding like a dream sequence: a body submerged in water, a flurry of balloons released into the open sky, city lights streaming through a hotel room, and fleeting scenes captured from a car window. Just as she is drawn to movement, it is these liminal spaces that the artist gravitates towards – the chaos, the stillness, and the magic in between. “The work comes from reality, but it’s a reality that’s distorted by subjectivity,” says McCauley. “It’s an expression of my state of mind during these restless off-moments.” 


A Special Edition is also available here.


For trade enquiries, please get in touch here