Beth Carter-Woodhouse (b.1998) is a photographic practitioner based in London.
Her practice focuses on themes of the body, sculptural forms and the every day in an attempt to question how we engage with our surroundings. Her latest project Forgotten Matter uses the constraints of a riverbank along the Thames. The work studies washed-up objects from the riverbed, objects she claims as sculptures. She explores how we can overlook these outer edges of the city by creating a visual dialogue between her body and the landscape.
Her practice focuses on themes of the body, sculptural forms and the every day in an attempt to question how we engage with our surroundings. Her latest project Forgotten Matter uses the constraints of a riverbank along the Thames. The work studies washed-up objects from the riverbed, objects she claims as sculptures. She explores how we can overlook these outer edges of the city by creating a visual dialogue between her body and the landscape.
Education
BA Photography London College of Communication
exhibitions
The Way We Rise, hARTSlane Gallery, London (2022)
Coping Through, Copeland Gallery, London (2022)
Print Sale, The Arts Academy, London (2022)