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The

Artist

Frida Jersø

Nominated in
2025
By
Copenhagen Photo Festival
Lives and Works in
Denmark
Frida Lisa Carstensen Jersø (b. 1997) holds a BFA in Photography from HDK-Valand Academy of Art and Design in Gothenburg, Sweden, and previously studied at Copenhagen Film and Photography School. Her photographic practice encompasses both classical photography, including analog and digital techniques, as well as medical imaging. She incorporates radiological scans of her body, creating two- and three-dimensional works that bridge medical processes and personal narrative. Jersø's artistic focus lies within the realms of Sick Photography and Therapeutic Photography. Her work explores the physical and emotional dimensions of the disabled and chronically ill body, challenging societal perceptions and ableist norms. She has exhibited at venues such as Röda Sten Konsthall in Gothenburg, participated in the Artist’s Autumn Exhibition, and contributed to group exhibitions across Scandinavia. Currently, she is preparing a solo exhibition at the Finnish Museum of Photography. In 2023, she received an award in the Portræt NU! competition. Her work has been featured in Danish media outlets such as DR.DK and Politiken. Jersø is also collaborating with Disko Bay Books on a photobook publication, further cementing her role as an upcoming voice in contemporary photography.
Projects
2024

Frida Forever

When I turn the camera on myself, it is not just because I am often alone but because my sick body - with its scars, metal implants, and fragility - is the landscape I know best. Frida Forever is based on my forthcoming book, to be published by Disko Bay in January 2025. The project sheds light on life as disabled and chronically ill, along with the many challenges that come with it. In 2012, I was in an accident that broke my back and left me paralyzed. Additionally, I have experienced cell changes, leading to over a hundred surgeries, countless medical treatments, and radiation therapy. I have spent more than half of my adult life in hospitals. Through photographic self-portraits and images from my hospital stays, I document the life of illness and contrast it with the vibrant, youthful life outside hospital walls. The project unveils the hidden aspects of living with illness and disability, often invisible to others, and challenges what it means to be young and chronically ill. Frida Forever embraces the intersection of being young and sick - or both at once. From the sterile surroundings of the hospital to energetic snapshots of life beyond, the work employs a raw yet playful photographic expression to tell a deeply personal and vulnerable story. For me, it has been a necessity to shape my identity in the liminal space between illness and health. It has been a fragmented process of trying to construct my sense of self within a vacuum of normalcy. Photography becomes my mirror - a way to capture the fragmented parts of myself and my identity. Through the lens of the camera, I reclaim a sense of control and create a narrative where I am not just a patient but also a curator, reshaping the gaze of illness into something deeply personal and meaningful. I live in the borderlands between the healthy and the sick, and it is in these spaces that my project has taken shape - a testament to life on both sides of the hospital walls. Frida Forever is not only a depiction of illness; it is also a story of youth, freedom, and the vulnerability of the human body.
Frida Jersø
was nominated by
Copenhagen Photo Festival
in
2025
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.

Frida Jersø  

Through her project ‘Frida Forever’, young Danish photographer Frida Lisa Carstensen Jersø (b. 1997) explores the living state of being sick while being young. In 2012, the photographer went into an accident that broke her back and left her paralyzed. During her numerous stays in the hospital, Jersø photographed herself. Through intimate images, the artist documented a life of illness in contrast with the vibrant youthful life beyond the hospital walls. Jersø uses her visual apparatus to reveal deeply personal experiences of embracing the vulnerability of the body with a sharp gaze into her own body and the condition of being physically confined. The project thus grants the viewer  access to a world and a process that are otherwise hidden behind the hospital curtains. Jersø’s images unveil a state of transition from youth to adulthood in sharp duality of freedom and the limitations caused by diseases, leading the viewer to ruminating on the impermanence of “being healthy”. 


Andreas Hopfgarten 

Andreas Hopfgarten (b. 1987) is a German visual artist and photographer based in Reykjavik, Iceland. Hopfgarten’s project „Where there is a will…“ sets its focus on the town of Espelkamp, once a World War II refugee camp and later transformed into a modern settlement for displaced populations in northern Germany. As our gaze is directed to enigmatic objects, spaces and situations in the images, we can almost picture the artist walking, seeing and encountering in his environment. „Where there is a will…“ offers a different perspective on the history of Germany through zooming in on the evolving story of town Espelkamp. With a research-based approach, Hopfgarten uses the medium of photography to provoke our thoughts on memory, identity, and the cultural forces that shape them.


Marcus Gustafsson 

Marcus Gustafsson (b. 1990, Sweden) works primarily with analogue photography. In his deeply personal project ‘Filling in the Gaps’, the artist meditates on memory, family history and human connection. Here we see the photographer’s own photos intertwined with archival family photos with traces of manipulation of painting, taping and drawing that transform photographic processes into intimate acts of reclamation and sites of inquiry through seemingly naive gestures. This exchange being his own photos and the archival sends us a visual nonverbal journey where we instinctively try to fill the gap between the past and present, the child and the grown-up, trauma and reflection. We encounter an emotionally charged photography project on coming to terms with one’s own past, as we are confronted with the artist’s, and perhaps even our own, attempts to reconcile.


Maria Høy Hansen 

Danish photographer Maria Høy Hansen’s (b. 1995) work often revolves around people who live on the periphery of the society, self-chosen or not. The project ‘Hidden Away’ captures daily lives of patients in ‘Centrul de plasament Bădiceni’, one of the remaining ‘temporary homes’ for people with disabilities in Moldova. Through strong visuals that portray the people and environment inside the institution, the project allows the viewer to access the psychological and physical conditions of the people in Bădiceni. Hansen’s images call for sympathies and bear witness to the agony of the community, along with its long endurance of violence, negligence and cruel living conditions.

The festival’s program committee consists of the following members: 

Patricia Breinholm Bertram | Curator and Head of Communications at Martin Asbæk Gallery

Stinus Duch | Publisher and Founder of Disko Bay Books 

Søren Pagter | Head of Photo Journalism at the Danish School of Media and Journalism/DMJX

Maja Dyrehauge Gregersen | Managing Director of Copenhagen Photo Festival