Bringin together the photography of visual sociologists, alongside finalists from an open call for photography of absence.
Absence, curated by sociologists Laura Harris and Maike Pötschulat, is a new group exhibition that brings together the photography of seven visual sociologists, alongside finalists from an open call for photography of absences in the Liverpool City Region.
The show explores absence as both a social reality and a visual language. Across more than 100 photographs, the show investigates absence’s many forms, asking: What does it mean to document what is no longer there, or those who are no longer present? How can we see what society leaves behind, or what never came to be? How can we photograph what resists to be shown?
Maike Pötschulat, one of the exhibition’s curators, said:
Absence is not emptiness. Often, what appears to be absent can have a large footprint in our lives and societies while generating a whole host of activities. In this exhibition, we wanted to focus on the ways in which absence is lived, felt and practised to show what materialises in the gaps and voids that are left by an absence.
The exhibition includes:
Terence Heng’s photography of Bukit Brown Cemetery, a Chinese diaspora graveyard in Singapore, exploring death, one of the most evocative forms of absence. Heng’s work highlights how loss is a fertile ground for collective beliefs and practices.
A selection of Setareh Kazemi’s photojournalistic work in Iran, with a focus on the lives of women and migrant communities who rarely find representation. Her work is a reminder of the power of photography to make visible experiences and people that are frequently overlooked.
Manal Massalha’s Standing Tall series, which documents Palestinian life and hardship in the Occupied Territories in the West Bank. Here, absence is not a noun but a verb, where a process of violent ‘absenting’ is inflicted on Palestinian communities and lands.
An extract of David Schalliol’s Isolated Building Studies, selected from a portfolio of over 700 images. As a broader commentary on urban and social change in Chicago, these images feature stand-alone buildings that are the last, or first, remnants of physical and social neighbourhoods.
Makeshift, in which Paweł Starzec revisits sites of the Bosnian War with the muted pastel aesthetic of his photography in stark contrast to the atrocities that happened in the photographed places. Starzec’s work is a critical commentary on the way power manipulates what and who is remembered.
Gesche Würfel’s The Absence and Presence of The Berlin Wall, a comprehensive research project that speaks to the traces of the wall in material and psychic terms. We exhibit composite images that were created on Würfel’s cycle along the 160km Berlin Wall Trail.
Five polaroids, all of which for unknown reasons shed their owners and now exist alongside the 4000 images in Kyler Zeleny’s Found Polaroid archive. While their original context is forever lost, the displayed polaroids feature flash fiction that was written to reanimate them.
Running alongside the exhibition are the submissions from an Open Call for photography of absence in the Liverpool City Region, which generated hundreds of images that highlight how absence is woven into the built and social fabric of the area. Five finalists, whose work is exhibited, are:
Daniel Frost
Alishah Iqbal
Paradise Made
Dan Murphy
Claire Weetman
Reserve your free ticket for the exhibition launch on 5th June 6pm here.
This exhibition is free and open to the public, visitors are welcome from 6th June to 11th July, Monday to Saturday, from 9:30am to 4:30pm.
Public events programme
Funded by the British Academy’s BA/Leverhulme Small Research Grants Programme and Liverpool John Moores University’s FSC Research Development Fund, the exhibition also includes a series of public events. There will be several opportunities to see the exhibition together with the photographers, curators and organisers for the launch weekend which includes the following activities:
6 June 2026, 2.30–4pm: Exhibition tour with curators and photographers at Stable Gallery (book your free ticket)
6 June 2026, 5–7pm: Absence in conversation. Panel discussion at Open Eye Gallery followed by reception (book your free ticket)
10 June 2026, 2–3pm: Exhibition tour with curators at Stable Gallery (book your free ticket)
13 June 2026, 1–2pm: Exhibition tour with curators at Stable Gallery (book your free ticket)
With support from: The British Academy, Liverpool John Moores University, Open Eye Gallery, Stable Gallery, University of Southampton.
Image credit: Paweł Starzec – Heliodrom, Mostar, 2017, from Makeshift series

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