FT Weekend, Jan 2023
Theatre, cover and feature as part of Workers Special, FT Weekend Magazine, January 2023
Lewis Khan is a photographic artist born and raised in London, working with stills and motion. From an early age, Khan was drawn to the tactile and immediate nature of photography, using the camera as a means to engage with the world around him.
His portrait based practice is a study of emotion, relationships and belonging. With a keen eye for observation and a personal interest in community as a driving force in his work, Khan has produced an impressive portfolio of imagery that both acts as social commentary, and immerses him physically in the places, groups, and relationships pictured in his photographs.
Khan cites his first foray in to moving image ‘Georgetown’ as a formative project that would go on to influence his approach to stills. The film is informed by six years of impromptu and informal meetings with local resident George, with Khan revisiting the subject over an extended period of time; an approach that he says has given his subsequent projects greater depth. The film was exhibited widely (most notably at The Photographer’s Gallery), and awarded first prize at Shuffle Film Festival by director Danny Boyle.
Other landmark bodies of work include ‘Theatre’, a personal project that saw Khan spend four years inside two London general hospitals to paint an intimate portrait of the NHS during a turbulent time. His photographs bear witness to our collective humanity, and the strength and fragility of all those who work in the health service. A limited edition book by the same name was published by The Lost Light Recordings at the height of the 2020 pandemic.
His latest work ‘Leavers’ sees Khan chronicle the annual ritual of the secondary school prom in stills and on Super8 film. The resulting film features a spoken word voiceover specially written by poet and author, Caleb Femi, and offers a joyful challenge to the often negative stereotypes surrounding inner-city teenage life.
Theatre, cover and feature as part of Workers Special, FT Weekend Magazine, January 2023
Mike, exhibited at the Taylor Wessing Portrait Prize 2022.
Exhibition held at Cromwell Place, London.
Photographs © David Parry
Leavers, screened at Aesthetica Short Film Festival 2022, York.
Permanent artwork installations for the 5 recovery rooms in SCBU (Special Care Baby Unit) at the West Middlesex Hospital, London.
Commissioned by CW+.
Leavers, cover and feature, Granta Magazine Issue 158, February 2022
Theatre, 1st Edition 270mm x 215mm 88pp
Published by The Lost Light Recordings, 2020.
In 2014 Khan won a bursary to make imagery for an exhibition at The Chelsea & Westminster Hospital, London, after which the Hospital Trust asked him to pitch for a new project. Initially his idea revolved around the politics of anti-privatization, a narrative that is still important to him. Gradually though, his approach became less overtly political and more transparently human, dealing with the strength and fragility that he witnessed on a daily basis.
He spent prolonged periods time assimilating to the environment. Shadowing Mark Bower, a consultant oncologist, he became aware of the emotional effects of hospital life that apply just as much to staff as patients. This observation suggested that the hierarchy that we might assume of hospital life is a fallacy. The reality is more like a mutual respect that eschews power dynamics in favour of a communal understanding.
From Strength and Fragility, by Jim Campbell.
Portrait of Britain is an award-winning nationwide photography exhibition, run by British Journal of Photography in partnership with JCDecaux. The exhibition celebrates the rich tapestry of people that make up Great Britain, by turning their stories into public art.
Photographs © Christopher Bethell
Georgetown, awarded 1st Prize at Shuffle Film Festival 2014
Judges:
Danny Boyle
Clio Barnard
Sally El Hosaini
Dexter Fletcher
Photographs © Cameron Williamson & Elena Heatherwick
Georgetown, Fresh Faced + Wild Eyed
Established in 2008, the annual exhibition and competition Fresh Faced + Wild Eyed gives emerging talent the opportunity to exhibit their work at The Photographers’ Gallery. Showcasing the quality and breadth of graduate work from visual arts courses across the UK, the exhibition and relating programmes celebrate the innovative practices from a range of photographic fields.
Selected by a panel of photographic experts from different backgrounds, artist/photographers have the opportunity to work closely with the exhibitions team to develop their presentation within the exhibition at The Photographers’ Gallery
Photographs © Kate Elliott
Georgetown, Screening at the Bonnington Festival.
Projection onto the wall of George's house.