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bectic

Bec Wickham

64
posts
880
followers
498
following

Chromatograms made from samples of soil gathered east to west along the Dingo Fence; photographic records of the physical and biological composition of the earth.
 
Part of my ongoing project tracing the fence’s path across the continent, working with the landscape more as collaborator than subject


86
8
1 months ago


Chromatograms made from samples of soil gathered east to west along the Dingo Fence; photographic records of the physical and biological composition of the earth.
 
Part of my ongoing project tracing the fence’s path across the continent, working with the landscape more as collaborator than subject


86
8
1 months ago

Chromatograms made from samples of soil gathered east to west along the Dingo Fence; photographic records of the physical and biological composition of the earth.
 
Part of my ongoing project tracing the fence’s path across the continent, working with the landscape more as collaborator than subject


86
8
1 months ago

Chromatograms made from samples of soil gathered east to west along the Dingo Fence; photographic records of the physical and biological composition of the earth.
 
Part of my ongoing project tracing the fence’s path across the continent, working with the landscape more as collaborator than subject


86
8
1 months ago

Chromatograms made from samples of soil gathered east to west along the Dingo Fence; photographic records of the physical and biological composition of the earth.
 
Part of my ongoing project tracing the fence’s path across the continent, working with the landscape more as collaborator than subject


86
8
1 months ago

EXHIBITION

Once Was
Rebecca Wickham

How do we mourn for more-than-human deaths, when all that remains of loss is empty space? 'Once Was' explores the hollow land left behind when glaciers melt, and the grief and guilt that coalesces in the bare earth revealed by their erasure.

'Marina Warner refers to the death mask as the ‘psychological precursor’ to the photograph, in both form and use. A memorial photograph pre-photography, it acts as an object of grief and remembrance; an imprint of presence in the wake of disappearance. Here, these post-glacial landscapes are seen as death mask themselves, cast from the moving form of the glacier that after death, leaves only its impression behind in the earth.'

Showing at photo access until 28 Feb.

@bectic

Images: Eunie Kim @euniek.photogallery


88
3 months ago

EXHIBITION

Once Was
Rebecca Wickham

How do we mourn for more-than-human deaths, when all that remains of loss is empty space? 'Once Was' explores the hollow land left behind when glaciers melt, and the grief and guilt that coalesces in the bare earth revealed by their erasure.

'Marina Warner refers to the death mask as the ‘psychological precursor’ to the photograph, in both form and use. A memorial photograph pre-photography, it acts as an object of grief and remembrance; an imprint of presence in the wake of disappearance. Here, these post-glacial landscapes are seen as death mask themselves, cast from the moving form of the glacier that after death, leaves only its impression behind in the earth.'

Showing at photo access until 28 Feb.

@bectic

Images: Eunie Kim @euniek.photogallery


88
3 months ago

EXHIBITION

Once Was
Rebecca Wickham

How do we mourn for more-than-human deaths, when all that remains of loss is empty space? 'Once Was' explores the hollow land left behind when glaciers melt, and the grief and guilt that coalesces in the bare earth revealed by their erasure.

'Marina Warner refers to the death mask as the ‘psychological precursor’ to the photograph, in both form and use. A memorial photograph pre-photography, it acts as an object of grief and remembrance; an imprint of presence in the wake of disappearance. Here, these post-glacial landscapes are seen as death mask themselves, cast from the moving form of the glacier that after death, leaves only its impression behind in the earth.'

Showing at photo access until 28 Feb.

@bectic

Images: Eunie Kim @euniek.photogallery


88
3 months ago


EXHIBITION

Once Was
Rebecca Wickham

How do we mourn for more-than-human deaths, when all that remains of loss is empty space? 'Once Was' explores the hollow land left behind when glaciers melt, and the grief and guilt that coalesces in the bare earth revealed by their erasure.

'Marina Warner refers to the death mask as the ‘psychological precursor’ to the photograph, in both form and use. A memorial photograph pre-photography, it acts as an object of grief and remembrance; an imprint of presence in the wake of disappearance. Here, these post-glacial landscapes are seen as death mask themselves, cast from the moving form of the glacier that after death, leaves only its impression behind in the earth.'

Showing at photo access until 28 Feb.

@bectic

Images: Eunie Kim @euniek.photogallery


88
3 months ago

TOMORROW

Artist talk:
Death Masks & Glaciers
Rebecca Wickham

11am Saturday 31 Jan
📍 photo access

An Australian early-career photographer, Rebecca has recently graduated from London College of Communication with an MA (Distinction) in Photojournalism and Documentary Photography. Her research-based practice sits between photography and other mediums, with work concerning the climate crisis and our relationship with the earth. Primarily focused on landscape, she is interested in the materiality of place, often working directly with the environment to bring a trace of its history and physicality into the work.

🎟️ RSVP via the link in our bio under ‘events’.

Image: Rebecca Wickham, 'Tiefen Glacier', 2024, lithographs, 210 x 148mm each.


113
1
3 months ago

EXHIBITION OPENING:
Once Was by Rebecca Wickham

6pm Thurs 29 Jan at photo access

‘Once Was’ asks how we mourn more-than-human deaths when all that remains of loss is empty space. Photographs of post-glacial landscapes are paired with a series of death masks, formed from earth, rock and meltwater gathered at each site and cast from a mould of the artist’s own face.

Historically a memorial object that predates photography, the death mask functions as an imprint of presence, an object of grief and remembrance in the wake of disappearance. Here, it binds our fate to that of our glaciers: the Earth’s skin is our skin too. These images speak to our entanglement with, and responsibility for, sites of loss, an elegy and a prophecy.

Image:
Rebecca Wickham
Calderone Glacier, Death Mask (diptych), 2024
digital photographs


84
3 months ago

EXHIBITION OPENING:
Once Was by Rebecca Wickham

6pm Thurs 29 Jan at photo access

‘Once Was’ asks how we mourn more-than-human deaths when all that remains of loss is empty space. Photographs of post-glacial landscapes are paired with a series of death masks, formed from earth, rock and meltwater gathered at each site and cast from a mould of the artist’s own face.

Historically a memorial object that predates photography, the death mask functions as an imprint of presence, an object of grief and remembrance in the wake of disappearance. Here, it binds our fate to that of our glaciers: the Earth’s skin is our skin too. These images speak to our entanglement with, and responsibility for, sites of loss, an elegy and a prophecy.

Image:
Rebecca Wickham
Calderone Glacier, Death Mask (diptych), 2024
digital photographs


84
3 months ago

WIP from an ongoing project following the 5614 km Dingo Fence across Australia, from Barunggam Country in Queensland’s Western Downs to Wirangu Country on the far west coast of South Australia. It’s a work about ecology, extractivism, and the ongoing legacies of colonialism evidenced in the Australian landscape.
 
The longest environmental barrier in the world, the Dingo Fence was built from the 1880s – 1950s to protect the designated sheep country of Eastern Australia. It continues to have an enduring impact on the land it severs, establishing two separate ecologies on either side of the wire, the removal of the dingo leading to a much reduced biodiversity in the enclosed area.
 
Generously supported by a Mead Fellowship.


99
7
4 months ago

WIP from an ongoing project following the 5614 km Dingo Fence across Australia, from Barunggam Country in Queensland’s Western Downs to Wirangu Country on the far west coast of South Australia. It’s a work about ecology, extractivism, and the ongoing legacies of colonialism evidenced in the Australian landscape.
 
The longest environmental barrier in the world, the Dingo Fence was built from the 1880s – 1950s to protect the designated sheep country of Eastern Australia. It continues to have an enduring impact on the land it severs, establishing two separate ecologies on either side of the wire, the removal of the dingo leading to a much reduced biodiversity in the enclosed area.
 
Generously supported by a Mead Fellowship.


99
7
4 months ago

WIP from an ongoing project following the 5614 km Dingo Fence across Australia, from Barunggam Country in Queensland’s Western Downs to Wirangu Country on the far west coast of South Australia. It’s a work about ecology, extractivism, and the ongoing legacies of colonialism evidenced in the Australian landscape.
 
The longest environmental barrier in the world, the Dingo Fence was built from the 1880s – 1950s to protect the designated sheep country of Eastern Australia. It continues to have an enduring impact on the land it severs, establishing two separate ecologies on either side of the wire, the removal of the dingo leading to a much reduced biodiversity in the enclosed area.
 
Generously supported by a Mead Fellowship.


99
7
4 months ago


WIP from an ongoing project following the 5614 km Dingo Fence across Australia, from Barunggam Country in Queensland’s Western Downs to Wirangu Country on the far west coast of South Australia. It’s a work about ecology, extractivism, and the ongoing legacies of colonialism evidenced in the Australian landscape.
 
The longest environmental barrier in the world, the Dingo Fence was built from the 1880s – 1950s to protect the designated sheep country of Eastern Australia. It continues to have an enduring impact on the land it severs, establishing two separate ecologies on either side of the wire, the removal of the dingo leading to a much reduced biodiversity in the enclosed area.
 
Generously supported by a Mead Fellowship.


99
7
4 months ago

WIP from an ongoing project following the 5614 km Dingo Fence across Australia, from Barunggam Country in Queensland’s Western Downs to Wirangu Country on the far west coast of South Australia. It’s a work about ecology, extractivism, and the ongoing legacies of colonialism evidenced in the Australian landscape.
 
The longest environmental barrier in the world, the Dingo Fence was built from the 1880s – 1950s to protect the designated sheep country of Eastern Australia. It continues to have an enduring impact on the land it severs, establishing two separate ecologies on either side of the wire, the removal of the dingo leading to a much reduced biodiversity in the enclosed area.
 
Generously supported by a Mead Fellowship.


99
7
4 months ago

WIP from an ongoing project following the 5614 km Dingo Fence across Australia, from Barunggam Country in Queensland’s Western Downs to Wirangu Country on the far west coast of South Australia. It’s a work about ecology, extractivism, and the ongoing legacies of colonialism evidenced in the Australian landscape.
 
The longest environmental barrier in the world, the Dingo Fence was built from the 1880s – 1950s to protect the designated sheep country of Eastern Australia. It continues to have an enduring impact on the land it severs, establishing two separate ecologies on either side of the wire, the removal of the dingo leading to a much reduced biodiversity in the enclosed area.
 
Generously supported by a Mead Fellowship.


99
7
4 months ago

WIP from an ongoing project following the 5614 km Dingo Fence across Australia, from Barunggam Country in Queensland’s Western Downs to Wirangu Country on the far west coast of South Australia. It’s a work about ecology, extractivism, and the ongoing legacies of colonialism evidenced in the Australian landscape.
 
The longest environmental barrier in the world, the Dingo Fence was built from the 1880s – 1950s to protect the designated sheep country of Eastern Australia. It continues to have an enduring impact on the land it severs, establishing two separate ecologies on either side of the wire, the removal of the dingo leading to a much reduced biodiversity in the enclosed area.
 
Generously supported by a Mead Fellowship.


99
7
4 months ago

WIP from an ongoing project following the 5614 km Dingo Fence across Australia, from Barunggam Country in Queensland’s Western Downs to Wirangu Country on the far west coast of South Australia. It’s a work about ecology, extractivism, and the ongoing legacies of colonialism evidenced in the Australian landscape.
 
The longest environmental barrier in the world, the Dingo Fence was built from the 1880s – 1950s to protect the designated sheep country of Eastern Australia. It continues to have an enduring impact on the land it severs, establishing two separate ecologies on either side of the wire, the removal of the dingo leading to a much reduced biodiversity in the enclosed area.
 
Generously supported by a Mead Fellowship.


99
7
4 months ago

Last few months 🌸


62
2
6 months ago


Last few months 🌸


62
2
6 months ago

Last few months 🌸


62
2
6 months ago

Last few months 🌸


62
2
6 months ago

Last few months 🌸


62
2
6 months ago

Last few months 🌸


62
2
6 months ago

Last few months 🌸


62
2
6 months ago

Thrilled to be a finalist in the National Emerging Art Prize for 2025 ✨

This image shows the landscape that was once Pizol Glacier, alongside a death mask cast from my own face, made with earth, rock and meltwater from the site. It’s from a wider body of work exploring ecological grief, and the guilt that is intertwined with environmental loss.

Can’t wait to see all the works installed, and big congrats to all the other incredible finalists!

@nationalemergingartprize


114
25
7 months ago

In 1674, the village of Fiesch in Switzerland began an annual pilgrimage to pray for the retreat of the glacier that was advancing towards their homes. For 350 years, every July 31, they traced the same path up the mountainside to a small chapel in the forest.

In 2009, they formally petitioned the Vatican to allow them to reverse the wording of the prayer, instead asking for the glacier to return.

These images were taken on the procession last year, and are currently being shown as part of ‘Oscillating Spaces’ at @canadiancentreforarchitecture. The exhibition looks to the Rhône Glacier, and the entanglement between environment, spirituality and local traditions. Open until October!


82
9
1 years ago

In 1674, the village of Fiesch in Switzerland began an annual pilgrimage to pray for the retreat of the glacier that was advancing towards their homes. For 350 years, every July 31, they traced the same path up the mountainside to a small chapel in the forest.

In 2009, they formally petitioned the Vatican to allow them to reverse the wording of the prayer, instead asking for the glacier to return.

These images were taken on the procession last year, and are currently being shown as part of ‘Oscillating Spaces’ at @canadiancentreforarchitecture. The exhibition looks to the Rhône Glacier, and the entanglement between environment, spirituality and local traditions. Open until October!


82
9
1 years ago

In 1674, the village of Fiesch in Switzerland began an annual pilgrimage to pray for the retreat of the glacier that was advancing towards their homes. For 350 years, every July 31, they traced the same path up the mountainside to a small chapel in the forest.

In 2009, they formally petitioned the Vatican to allow them to reverse the wording of the prayer, instead asking for the glacier to return.

These images were taken on the procession last year, and are currently being shown as part of ‘Oscillating Spaces’ at @canadiancentreforarchitecture. The exhibition looks to the Rhône Glacier, and the entanglement between environment, spirituality and local traditions. Open until October!


82
9
1 years ago

In 1674, the village of Fiesch in Switzerland began an annual pilgrimage to pray for the retreat of the glacier that was advancing towards their homes. For 350 years, every July 31, they traced the same path up the mountainside to a small chapel in the forest.

In 2009, they formally petitioned the Vatican to allow them to reverse the wording of the prayer, instead asking for the glacier to return.

These images were taken on the procession last year, and are currently being shown as part of ‘Oscillating Spaces’ at @canadiancentreforarchitecture. The exhibition looks to the Rhône Glacier, and the entanglement between environment, spirituality and local traditions. Open until October!


82
9
1 years ago

In 1674, the village of Fiesch in Switzerland began an annual pilgrimage to pray for the retreat of the glacier that was advancing towards their homes. For 350 years, every July 31, they traced the same path up the mountainside to a small chapel in the forest.

In 2009, they formally petitioned the Vatican to allow them to reverse the wording of the prayer, instead asking for the glacier to return.

These images were taken on the procession last year, and are currently being shown as part of ‘Oscillating Spaces’ at @canadiancentreforarchitecture. The exhibition looks to the Rhône Glacier, and the entanglement between environment, spirituality and local traditions. Open until October!


82
9
1 years ago

In 1674, the village of Fiesch in Switzerland began an annual pilgrimage to pray for the retreat of the glacier that was advancing towards their homes. For 350 years, every July 31, they traced the same path up the mountainside to a small chapel in the forest.

In 2009, they formally petitioned the Vatican to allow them to reverse the wording of the prayer, instead asking for the glacier to return.

These images were taken on the procession last year, and are currently being shown as part of ‘Oscillating Spaces’ at @canadiancentreforarchitecture. The exhibition looks to the Rhône Glacier, and the entanglement between environment, spirituality and local traditions. Open until October!


82
9
1 years ago

In 1674, the village of Fiesch in Switzerland began an annual pilgrimage to pray for the retreat of the glacier that was advancing towards their homes. For 350 years, every July 31, they traced the same path up the mountainside to a small chapel in the forest.

In 2009, they formally petitioned the Vatican to allow them to reverse the wording of the prayer, instead asking for the glacier to return.

These images were taken on the procession last year, and are currently being shown as part of ‘Oscillating Spaces’ at @canadiancentreforarchitecture. The exhibition looks to the Rhône Glacier, and the entanglement between environment, spirituality and local traditions. Open until October!


82
9
1 years ago

In 1674, the village of Fiesch in Switzerland began an annual pilgrimage to pray for the retreat of the glacier that was advancing towards their homes. For 350 years, every July 31, they traced the same path up the mountainside to a small chapel in the forest.

In 2009, they formally petitioned the Vatican to allow them to reverse the wording of the prayer, instead asking for the glacier to return.

These images were taken on the procession last year, and are currently being shown as part of ‘Oscillating Spaces’ at @canadiancentreforarchitecture. The exhibition looks to the Rhône Glacier, and the entanglement between environment, spirituality and local traditions. Open until October!


82
9
1 years ago

From a magical time spent in the Cairngorms


102
5
1 years ago

From a magical time spent in the Cairngorms


102
5
1 years ago

From a magical time spent in the Cairngorms


102
5
1 years ago

From a magical time spent in the Cairngorms


102
5
1 years ago

From a magical time spent in the Cairngorms


102
5
1 years ago

From a magical time spent in the Cairngorms


102
5
1 years ago

From a magical time spent in the Cairngorms


102
5
1 years ago

Calderone glacier in the Apennines, Italy, now classified as dead ice.


89
2
1 years ago

Litho prints of Tiefen glacier, repeated until the ink ran out

@lcclondonphoto


98
9
1 years ago

Litho prints of Tiefen glacier, repeated until the ink ran out

@lcclondonphoto


98
9
1 years ago

Litho prints of Tiefen glacier, repeated until the ink ran out

@lcclondonphoto


98
9
1 years ago

Litho prints of Tiefen glacier, repeated until the ink ran out

@lcclondonphoto


98
9
1 years ago

Litho prints of Tiefen glacier, repeated until the ink ran out

@lcclondonphoto


98
9
1 years ago

Litho prints of Tiefen glacier, repeated until the ink ran out

@lcclondonphoto


98
9
1 years ago

Small remnant of Calderone glacier / Death mask made with earth and meltwater from the site

Part of my work ‘Once Was’ on show at @lcclondon from Thursday @lcclondonphoto


112
5
1 years ago

Small remnant of Calderone glacier / Death mask made with earth and meltwater from the site

Part of my work ‘Once Was’ on show at @lcclondon from Thursday @lcclondonphoto


112
5
1 years ago


Instagramストーリーを秘密で見る

Instagramストーリービューアは、Instagramストーリー、動画、写真、またはIGTVを秘密に見たり保存したりできる簡単なツールです。このサービスを使用すると、コンテンツをダウンロードして、いつでもオフラインで楽しむことができます。Instagramで後でチェックしたいものを見つけた場合や、匿名でストーリーを見たい場合、このビューアは最適です。Anonstoriesは、あなたの身元を隠すための優れたソリューションを提供します。Instagramは2023年8月にストーリー機能を導入し、すぐに他のプラットフォームでも採用されました。このフォーマットは魅力的で、時間に敏感なため、ユーザーが写真、動画、または自撮りをテキスト、絵文字、またはフィルターで強化して、24時間限定で公開することができます。この限られた時間枠は、通常の投稿に比べて高いエンゲージメントを生み出します。今日の世界では、ストーリーはソーシャルメディアでつながり、コミュニケーションをとる最も人気のある方法の1つです。しかし、ストーリーを視聴すると、作成者は自分の名前を視聴者リストに見ることができ、プライバシーの懸念があります。もしストーリーを目立たずに閲覧したい場合、ここでAnonstoriesが役立ちます。これを使うことで、自分の身元を明かさずにInstagramのコンテンツを視聴できます。単に調べたいプロファイルのユーザー名を入力すると、その人の最新のストーリーが表示されます。Anonstoriesビューアの特徴:- 匿名閲覧:視聴リストに名前が表示されずにストーリーを視聴 - アカウント不要:Instagramのアカウントにサインインせずに公開コンテンツを視聴 - コンテンツダウンロード:ストーリーコンテンツを直接デバイスに保存してオフラインで使用 - ハイライト視聴:24時間を過ぎてもInstagramのハイライトにアクセス - リポストモニタリング:個人プロファイルのストーリーに対するリポストやエンゲージメントのレベルを追跡 制限事項:- このツールは公開アカウントでのみ動作し、非公開アカウントはアクセスできません。 利点:- プライバシー保護:Instagramのコンテンツを匿名で閲覧可能 - シンプルで簡単:アプリのインストールや登録は不要 - 独自のツール:Instagramが提供していない方法でコンテンツをダウンロードおよび管理可能

Anonstoriesの利点

IGストーリーをプライベートに探る

Instagramの更新をプライバシーを守りつつ、匿名で追跡できます。


プライベートInstagramビューア

プライベートプロファイルビューアを使用して、プロフィールと写真を簡単に匿名で閲覧できます。


無料のストーリービューア

この無料ツールでInstagramストーリーを匿名で閲覧でき、アクティビティがストーリーアップローダーに知られることはありません。

よくある質問

 
匿名性

Anonstoriesを使用すると、作成者に通知されることなくInstagramストーリーを閲覧できます。

 
デバイス互換性

iOS、Android、Windows、macOS、ChromeやSafariなどの最新のブラウザで問題なく動作します。

 
安全性とプライバシー

ログイン情報なしで、安全かつ匿名で閲覧できます。

 
登録不要

ユーザーは、ユーザー名を入力するだけで公開ストーリーを閲覧可能—アカウント登録は不要です。

 
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写真(JPEG)と動画(MP4)を簡単にダウンロードできます。

 
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サービスは無料で利用できます。

 
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非公開アカウントのコンテンツはフォロワーのみがアクセスできます。

 
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ファイルは個人または教育目的でのみ使用し、著作権法を遵守する必要があります。

 
動作方法

公開ユーザー名を入力して、ストーリーを閲覧またはダウンロードします。サービスはコンテンツをローカルに保存するための直接リンクを生成します。