Ryan Prince - Untitled
During the 2020 pandemic, when we went into a nationwide lockdown, there was much talk about the “new normal” regarding how we were all adjusting. The new normal for me became playing board games with my family every night. This is an image of my step-dad counting the number of spaces he needs to move during a family game of Ludo.
This is somewhat of an outtake from my "Ludo" project.
Ludo is a photographic project that documents the ritual of play my family adopted during the COVID-19 lockdowns in the UK.
Ryan Prince (born 1991, London) is a London-based documentary and portrait photographer whose work interrogates representation, identity, and family narratives. Drawing on his own experience as a Black British man from the Jamaican diaspora, his photography challenges stereotypes and reframes the ways Black communities are seen.
Prince’s images often centre on familial intimacy and everyday moments, offering a nuanced, affirmative counterpoint to dominant visual narratives. He studied Fine Art at the University of East London before completing an MA in Documentary Photography and Photojournalism at the University of Westminster. His work has been exhibited at the National Portrait Gallery, the Black Cultural Archives, and the Royal Photographic Society, and is held in the Martin Parr Foundation collection.Ludo is a photographic project that documents the ritual of play my family adopted during the COVID-19 lockdowns in the UK.
During the 2020 pandemic, when we went into a nationwide lockdown, there was much talk about the “new normal” regarding how we were all adjusting. The new normal for me became playing board games with my family every night. This is an image of my step-dad counting the number of spaces he needs to move during a family game of Ludo.
This is somewhat of an outtake from my "Ludo" project.
Ludo is a photographic project that documents the ritual of play my family adopted during the COVID-19 lockdowns in the UK.
Ryan Prince (born 1991, London) is a London-based documentary and portrait photographer whose work interrogates representation, identity, and family narratives. Drawing on his own experience as a Black British man from the Jamaican diaspora, his photography challenges stereotypes and reframes the ways Black communities are seen.
Prince’s images often centre on familial intimacy and everyday moments, offering a nuanced, affirmative counterpoint to dominant visual narratives. He studied Fine Art at the University of East London before completing an MA in Documentary Photography and Photojournalism at the University of Westminster. His work has been exhibited at the National Portrait Gallery, the Black Cultural Archives, and the Royal Photographic Society, and is held in the Martin Parr Foundation collection.Ludo is a photographic project that documents the ritual of play my family adopted during the COVID-19 lockdowns in the UK.