Marco Russo
Photographer

Marco Russo is a young Italian photographer. He graduated from SOAS University of London in 2021 after studying social anthropology. Over these years, he produced work that focuses mostly on portraiture and landscape photography.

In 2022, he moved to Egypt where he worked on a conceptual documentary project in collaboration with an Italian-Egyptian artist, which was then exhibited in January 2023 in Milan at the cultural center BASE.
After the experience in London and traveling around the Middle East, he came back to Italy where he is currently working on cultural projects in various southern regions. He’s also developing a series of photographs titled “Terracotta,” a project about oneness, clay and the origins of life.

As a photographer, he wants to explore human behavior and patterns of nature as the expression of the same living system. He works with both film and digital, always maintaining a naturalistic style.

Marco Russo
Photographer

Marco Russo is a young Italian photographer. He graduated from SOAS University of London in 2021 after studying social anthropology. Over these years, he produced work that focuses mostly on portraiture and landscape photography.

In 2022, he moved to Egypt where he worked on a conceptual documentary project in collaboration with an Italian-Egyptian artist, which was then exhibited in January 2023 in Milan at the cultural center BASE.
After the experience in London and traveling around the Middle East, he came back to Italy where he is currently working on cultural projects in various southern regions. He’s also developing a series of photographs titled “Terracotta,” a project about oneness, clay and the origins of life.

As a photographer, he wants to explore human behavior and patterns of nature as the expression of the same living system. He works with both film and digital, always maintaining a naturalistic style.

  • Lutz Bacher: AYE!
    Oct 5 – Dec 17, 2023
    Raven Row
    London, UK
    This exhibition of the unsettling, uncategorisable work of American artist Lutz Bacher (1943–2019) explores her use of music, sound and voice. Bacher’s work oscillates between the conceptual and the visceral. Much of it involves appropriation, using material from American popular culture and flotsam from the information age (pulp fiction, self-help manuals, trade magazines, scientific publications, pornography, bureaucracy, discarded photographs), in work that can be intimate, violent or funny. (more…)