Ioanna Sakellaraki
Photographer

My photographic work suggests a constructed space of fantasy and loss within the magical potential of transformation and fiction the camera allows.

Ioanna holds a MA in Photography from Royal College of Art in London.

Nominations and Awards include The Royal Photographic Society Postgraduate Bursary Award Winner; Nominated for Prix Levallois, Young International Photographic Talents; Nominated for Urbanautica Institute Awards; Nominated for Fotofilmic Traveling Exhibition to San Francisco, Vancouver, Seoul; Nominated for Kolga Tbilisi International Photography Festival Award; Nominated for Panasonic Readers’ Choice Award of Bird in Flight Prize; Honorable Mention Winner International Photography Awards; Honorable Mention Winner PX3 Prix de la Photographie Paris; Honorable Mention Winner Neutral Density Awards

Ioanna Sakellaraki
Photographer

My photographic work suggests a constructed space of fantasy and loss within the magical potential of transformation and fiction the camera allows.

Ioanna holds a MA in Photography from Royal College of Art in London.

Nominations and Awards include The Royal Photographic Society Postgraduate Bursary Award Winner; Nominated for Prix Levallois, Young International Photographic Talents; Nominated for Urbanautica Institute Awards; Nominated for Fotofilmic Traveling Exhibition to San Francisco, Vancouver, Seoul; Nominated for Kolga Tbilisi International Photography Festival Award; Nominated for Panasonic Readers’ Choice Award of Bird in Flight Prize; Honorable Mention Winner International Photography Awards; Honorable Mention Winner PX3 Prix de la Photographie Paris; Honorable Mention Winner Neutral Density Awards

  • Maria Hassabi: I’ll Be Your Mirror
    Oct 13 – Nov 26, 2023
    Tai Kwun Contemporary
    Hong Kong
    The artist and choreographer Maria Hassabi (b. Cyprus) has long pioneered live installations that explore the sculptural body, image-making, and the deceleration of time. Frequently involving dancers moving at a glacial, barely perceptible pace, Hassabi’s works confront visitors as living sculptures. Her works bring the performing body into museums, theatres, and public spaces, which shift the boundaries between visitors and performers, subjects and objects. (more…)