Nationhood: Memory and Hope – Street Level Photoworks
1st November 2025 – 8th February 2026
Street Level Photoworks, 103 Trongate, Glasgow G1 5HD
Exhibiting artists Miriam Ali, Haneen Hadiy, Grace Springer, Chad Alexander, Shaun Connell, Robin Chaddah-Dukeand, and Roz Doherty.
Nationhood: Memory and Hope is a new exhibition of powerful and poignant photography celebrating the diversity of the UK today. It is a love letter to all that is good in England, Northern Ireland, Wales, and Scotland, and offers a wealth of insights on how we each try and shape both our identities and communities to make the world a better place.
The cornerstone is The Necessity of Seeing, a major new collection of constructed images by the acclaimed Ethiopian photographer Aïda Muluneh. Shot through the artist’s surrealist lens at iconic locations in Glasgow, Bradford, Belfast, and Cardiff, these layered and complex images reveal the overlooked stories, forgotten histories and quiet moments that shape who we are.
A Portrait of Us – unsung community heroes
First seen on billboards around Bradford in autumn 2024, the exhibition also presents A Portrait of Us, Muluneh’s potent black and white photographs of unsung community heroes from the same four cities. The Glasgow heroines in Street Level’s selection includes portraits of Anita Shelton, a long-standing trade unionist, and a founding member of the Scottish Trades Union Congress Black Workers’ Committee; Linda Jackson, poet, writer, musician and teacher; and Adele Patrick, co-founder of Glasgow Women’s Library, cultural worker and champion of feminist and values led cultural leadership.
New photographic portraits by seven rising stars in UK photography explore issues of history, identity, race, gender, and religion.
Miriam Ali spotlights grassroots activists from community organisations in Glasgow, while the photographs of Haneen Hadiy view the beauty of Scottish landscapes through the lens of Islamic symbolism. Shaun Connell pays tribute to his Jamaican mother and Christian faith believers in Bradford, while fellow Bradford photographer Roz Doherty captures both the energy and uncertainty of youth in a new set of studio portraits. Chad Alexander explores the transformation of the Tropicana in Dungannon, from an Irish National Foresters club into a vibrant multicultural community hub. RobinChaddah-Duke reunites 1970s stalwarts of The Parade Community Education Centre in Cardiff to recreate a group portrait, and Grace Springer showcases the vibrancy of community game changers from the city’s African and Caribbean diasporas.
The exhibition premiered at the launch of Bradford 2025 UK City of Culture in January of 2025, then travelled to Belfast and Cardiff. It is the first ever UK City of Culture project to take place in all four nations of the UK.
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