Collection: New Art

Biography

Samuel Ryde is a London-based photographer with a passion for noticing the un-noticed objects and architecture of everyday human life. Through his lens, remarkable characters emerge from unremarkable spaces: Hand dryers in washrooms, telephone boxes on street corners, derelict buildings daubed with old signs and new graffiti - all of them tell accidental stories and remnants of moments shared by other people in another place and time.

 

Samuel’s debut book ‘Hand Dryers’, with a foreword by Sir James Dyson, was published by Unicorn in 2020.  This book was the first of its type documenting the industrial object with which we're all familiar and asking the viewer take a fresh look at the world it is in and the way we treat the anonymity of a bathroom. This release enjoyed features in The New York Times, The Guardian, The New York Magazine plus others.