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The

Artist

Nominated in
2026
By
ISSP
Lives and Works in
Tallinn
Triin Kerge is an artist based in Estonia and Italy. She works primarily with photography, embroidery, and archival materials. Her practice explores memory, home, and identity through her own photography, found photographs, and family archives, focusing on how images shift over time through material-based processes. By combining photographic processes with slow, material-based techniques, she examines how images change over time and how meaning shifts through repetition, material transformation, and physical engagement with images. Kerge is interested in the material instability of photographs and in how images function as carriers of personal and cultural memory. Her work is research-driven and often developed as long-term projects that bring together archival research, material experimentation, and image-making across different contexts and locations.
Projects
2023

Scenes From a Lost Family Album

Scenes From a Lost Family Album explores memory, loss, and the fragile permanence of family history. Inspired by the disappearance of my own family albums, the work evokes nostalgia for a past that can no longer be fully retrieved. The series consists of embroidered photographs, where each stitch becomes a bridge between past and present. By layering thread onto images of vanished family moments, absence is transformed into presence, and memory into material form. The work invites reflection on the universal desire to preserve family bonds, while acknowledging the distance and estrangement that accompany what is forgotten or lost.
Triin Kerge
was nominated by
ISSP
in
2026
Show all projects
Each year every member of the FUTURES European Photography Platform nominates a set of artists and projects to become part of the FUTURES network.

Across these works, photography unfolds not as a decisive capture of a moment, but as a prolonged engagement with memory – sometimes personal, sometimes collective – where meaning accumulates gradually. Whether through years-long observation of sisterhood, the slow rhythm of embroidery, or meticulously staged interventions in public space, each artist reflects on how images are shaped by time, and how time, in turn, is inscribed into images.


In Diana Tamane’s Half-Love, a relationship of care is built and maintained through photography. Over several years, the project follows the gradual maturing of her half-sister Elina, photographed once a year in the greenhouse of their family home in Varzas. The greenhouse operates both as an improvised studio and as a symbolic space of nurture and protection. For Tamane, the act of photographing is inseparable from spending time together; it allows her to revisit her own childhood while observing Elina’s coming-of-age. The project unfolds as both a long-term portrait and a love letter, an image-based relationship sustained through continuity and mutual commitment.

A different articulation of time and memory emerges in Triin Kerge’s embroidered photographic works. In Scenes From a Lost Family Album and the ongoing project Threads of the Canals, photography is slowed down through the tactile, repetitive act of stitching. Kerge works with absence, lost family photographs, fading architectural surfaces, and fleeting reflections, transforming fragile memories into material presence. Each stitch bridges past and present, translating the immediacy of the photographic image into a durational process of repair and contemplation. In Scenes From a Lost Family Album, embroidery becomes a way to mourn and reconstruct what can no longer be fully retrieved, while Threads of the Canals extends this approach to place, treating Venice as a living archive marked by erosion, resilience, and impermanence. Across both projects, memory is neither fixed nor complete, but continuously reworked through labour, touch, and time.

Filips ŠmitsLet’s Get Sun-Kissed approaches slowness through the politics of bodily presence in urban space. Composed of staged interventions across post-Soviet environments, the project explores acts of rest – sunbathing, lying down, pausing – as subtle disruptions within spaces designed for movement, surveillance, and efficiency. A body at rest in the “wrong” place becomes an interruption, raising questions about visibility, entitlement, and behavioural norms in public space. Through these carefully staged moments, the city is reframed as an emotionally charged landscape where pleasure and stillness momentarily resist the logic of productivity.


Together, these three practices propose photography as a medium of duration rather than immediacy. Time is not compressed into a decisive moment but stretched, layered, and inhabited through care, labour, repetition, and embodied presence.

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