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The

Artist

Cloe Jancis

Nominated in
2023
By
ISSP
Lives and Works in

Cloe Jancis (b. 1992) is an artist working with photography, video, drawing and installation. In 2018, she graduated from the Estonian Academy of Arts with a BA in photography, and is currently following an MA programme in the Faculty of Liberal Arts at the Estonian Academy of Arts. Jancis is fascinated by the social image and daily roles of women – and the related myths, expectations and feelings they evoke. In recent years, her work has focused on objects and rituals associated with performing femininity.

Projects

In Process

In this ongoing series, I use my own body in a series of staged photographs – almost all of which play with the concept of self-portrait. With the images, I question the line between the autobiographical and the fictional. All of the photographs start from a feeling or a reflection on a particular issue, whether it’s a personal question or a social one. Some images are more introspective, while others concentrate mainly on facades.

Cloe Jancis
was nominated by
ISSP
in
2023
Show all projects
Each year every member of the FUTURES European Photography Platform nominates a set of artists and projects to become part of the FUTURES network.

Cloe Jancis is Tallin-based artist who works primarily with photography, video and installation. Using her own body within staged photographs, Jancis reenacts a range of daily roles of women, highlighting their physical and mental manifestations. With an often playful approach, she questions the line between the autobiographical and fictional.

Informed by her own personal experience of displacement and migration upon returning to Lithuania after 17 years living abroad, Ieva Baltaduonyte's work engages with issues relating to migratory culture and its potential traumas. By using photography for both personal expression and to foster a critical dialogue with contemporary society, Ieva is preoccupied with encouraging a deeper engagement with cross-cultural dialogue.

Most often recognised as a masterful portrait photographer, Reinis Hofmanis’s series Room No. 13 reveals a portrait of humanity through images of empty public building interiors instead. In his images, the utility infrastructure has become a unique metaphor for the relationship between humans and their surroundings, revealing something of our desire to adapt, improve and, ultimately, give meaning to space.

Zane Priede examines the relationship between humans and nature through masterfully crafted still life photography. By utilising everyday objects, she creates imaginary and surreal images which reveal her deep fascination with architecture, design and biology. Her recent work Continuous Gardens explores a fictional potential future for plant life, and raises questions about how human intervention may impact its evolution.

Jurģis Peters is interested in visual explorations of the impact and consequences of various phenomena caused by advances in technology, with a particular focus on Artificial Intelligence (AI) both as a medium and a conceptual basis. Believing that the future is of AI and human co-creation, Peters uses these new technological possibilities as tools for visual storytelling and speculation regarding future scenarios.