
Fraser Hanley-Nicholls (Fraser H-N) is a photographic artist based in London. Fraser’s personal practice focuses mainly around the search for identity and how identities can ‘arise from the narrativization of the self’ (Stuart Hall, 1996).
His practice has been informed by his dual heritage and the questions it has raised in the ways society considers race, history, culture and how these may intersect with issues of inner conflict, belonging, ambiguity and ambivalence.
He realises his work through these lenses of experiences; blending aspects of fantasy and reality; he uses mixed-media and collage as a way to take apart, reinterpret and reconstruct narratives in the act of reconceptualising identity itself.

Fraser Hanley-Nicholls (Fraser H-N) is a photographic artist based in London. Fraser’s personal practice focuses mainly around the search for identity and how identities can ‘arise from the narrativization of the self’ (Stuart Hall, 1996).
His practice has been informed by his dual heritage and the questions it has raised in the ways society considers race, history, culture and how these may intersect with issues of inner conflict, belonging, ambiguity and ambivalence.
He realises his work through these lenses of experiences; blending aspects of fantasy and reality; he uses mixed-media and collage as a way to take apart, reinterpret and reconstruct narratives in the act of reconceptualising identity itself.