traces

2019
An examination of how the traces of colonial histories remain visible in public domains. Focused on a particular point in Kenya’s history, and Britain’s colonial involvement, and in examining the way this history has been captured but also hidden from view in public records.
Some of this research relied on the physical documents and ephemera that can be found within the National Archives. Some images are also taken from online family collections. 

German-English Illustrator, based in Brighton, UK

I am an illustrator and educator, with a particular focus on sequential narrative and drawing.

Much of my work focuses on exploring how illustration can be used as an active tool for understanding, interpreting and re-evaluating dominant narratives and discourse about historical events, asking: How can illustration add to our understanding of history, how can it challenge it?

I am interested in exploring and highlighting the ways in which history is recorded, suppressed, remembered and distorted. I have become particularly interested in how meaning and underlying power structures contained within archival records can be interpreted through the act of drawing.

More recent projects and research have become focused on the use of auto-ethnographic practices within comic making, the use of digital stimuli within illustration, and expanded definitions of illustration practice.