Apple TV
Idents for Channel 4

Supersonic R & Jasper Plum for Dyson
Idents for Cancer Research UK & Channel 4
Odyssey for Telstra
Call to the Wild for Apple

Patience for Byborre
Ignis
Pi8 & Pi6 for Bowers & Wilkins
Brand Reset for Aveda
Vision Pro Reveal for Apple

Idents for The Clove Club

Phantom GX 2 Elite for NIKE
Del Core Collection 1
Louis Vuitton 200

Morris

The Cliff

Mutate
Plénitude II for Dom Perignon

Guinness Goodness for Guinness

Diatoms
Babel

Eggs
Bring Magic to the Table for Coca-Cola
Never Ordinary Campaign for Made

Odyssey

Fork

Playground

Toccata

Order in Space

Fugue

Aerial
Utopia

Immaterial Objects for London Design Festival 2024
Information
Tension

Relief

Surface

Inner Child for Ressence
Extrusion

Exo

Playground Installation for London Design Festival 2023

Broken Dreams Broken Machines for Max Cooper

Stream of Thought for Max Cooper

Immersed in the Forest for Zara

Refuge
Fugue 3840x2160 / 25fps / Prores 422HQ
The film is a set of exactly repeated actions, but each time using different objects. It uses the structure of the fugue to create the films narrative, playing on the fugues characteristic of stating the subject in different voices.
Fugue in A major by Dmitri Shostakovich is a very interesting piece as it contains no harmonic dissonance at all. The Fugue was an outlier in a larger collection of Preludes and Fugues which at the time was panned by critics for being very harsh and dissonant.
The piece was written in 1950’s Russia under Stalin's regime and might have been a veiled criticism where any less subtle forms of criticism could have been very dangerous. Shostakovich had already been denounced for political incorrectness in 1948 by the communist party chairman, Andrei Zhdanov and lived under a persistent fear of the numerous purges that were taking place across Russia at that time.
The piece is performed by Sviatoslav Richter in 1956 in Prague.






Creative Direction & Production: Optical Arts
Music Written by: Dmitri Shostakovich
Music Preformed by: Stanslaw Richter / 1956 Prague
1st Camera Assistant: Elliott Lowe
Styling: Jamie-Lee Harding
VFX Supervisor: Miguel Wratten
Colourist: Martin Pryor
Editor: Matt Cronin
Retouching: Martin Pryor