Felicity Crawshaw

 Felicity Crawshaw is a London based photographer of people and places. She captures character and emotion in the portraits she takes, and creates compelling, immersive landscape images from the UK and worldwide. Her work often centres around people’s relationship and connection with the environment, and the essential and invisible bonds that link them to the landscape.   With a keen eye for the aesthetic, Felicity instinctively captures the ephemeral nature of the landscape and the people who inhabit it. When shooting advertising campaigns within controlled environments, she delivers the same spontaneous quality, and a sense of capturing the moment in a unique style which complements her personal work.


Someone’s Daughters

Shivalee Patel

I am 26 years young, female and live in London, UK. I have been seeking freedom for the last 10 years. This search for freedom began as a search for emotional liberation as I have always been a sensitive individual that absorbed and sunk into every wave of feeling felt by anyone in my surrounding. I remember being very young and being carried out of cinema’s when heartbreaks in Disney films were too upsetting for me. In 2015 I discovered the truth about the meat and dairy industry. I realised that sacred life was being kept in cages for a few moments of pleasure found by the consumer, including myself. 
My heart broke 1000 ways and my fight for freedom became externalised. I spent countless minutes, hours, days, months, raising awareness through the art of showcasing enough information to help people empathise with the lives that are voiceless and trapped in these hidden places globally. I have also studied Environmental Management and worked in a social justice charity trying to free enslaved workers at the bottom of the textile supply chain. I have always been passionate about giving a voice to the voiceless, and always will be. My fight for freedom also became an internal battle when I realised, I had a lot of mental health issues picked up from the toxic and emotionally volatile behaviours that were displayed around me when I was younger. I had experienced toxic abusive relationships, sexual harassment, emotional manipulation and assault by the time I was an adult.
My goal is to help beings feel freedom and empowerment in all sense of the word. In 2020 I became aware of the Black Lives Matter movement and decided to dedicate my time to supporting the movement using my voice and social media platforms. 
The journey continues here. I will never stop dreaming of a world where freedom and personal empowerment is at the core of our communities.

MM McCabe

 MM McCabe is the founder and trustee of Philosophy in Prison and Professor Emerita of Ancient Philosophy and Kings College, London.
To be represented as Someone’s Daughter is an honour and a privilege; for me it is rich in my memory of my mother to whose model I vainly aspire.
As my mother’s daughter, I learned the importance of listening to others and of seeing that everyone has something to say, and has a voice to be heard. She believed that everyone, no matter who, no matter where they are or what they have done has a right to our respectful attention just because they are human beings.  This does not mean we agree with what they think nor condone what they do but it does mean that they count: as Bentham insisted, ‘each to count for one, none for more than one’: we need to remember that each does count as one, no matter who they are. 

Notable Collections and Commissions

 Felicity’s work has been featured in the Creative Review Photography Annual, and she most recently won the Discovery Award in the Association of Photographers Awards. Her commercial clients include The National Lottery, Virgin Media, Santander, TransPennine Express, SSE, BBC, ITV, Giffgaff, National Garden Scheme, Debra UK, C4WS Homeless Project, Arts Admin, Scottish Sculpture Workshop, and Tate.