A Conversation with Lucy Rowcliffe

Small moments. Big meaning.

Lucy Rowcliffe is a passionate hobby photographer who shoots across street, wildlife and macro — always learning, always looking. Her work is rooted in noticing: the quiet beauty in everyday life.

For Flash. Issue 03 — a Project See & B × Jean Marie Film collaboration giving twenty creatives second-hand film cameras and total freedom — Lucy shot on a Minolta Zoom 80, creating three works: Morning Caffeine, The Beauty of Robbery, and Freebies.

Morning Caffeine captures a crisp, hazy morning with the sun just up — a subtle lens flare shifting the image into something almost cinematic. It’s calm, warm, and unforced. The kind of light you don’t plan, you just catch.

In The Beauty of Robbery, Lucy documents a bittersweet backyard task — providing for her morning toast, while making space for the inhabitants to build. A small act that holds two truths at once: taking, and giving back.

Then there’s Freebies — a work that moves through loss and renewal. As Lucy writes:

“The joy and hope of restoration in new life and belonging through Him. He is making all things new (2 Corinthians 5:17).”

More from Lucy at @lucystel.photography_.


Flash. — Exhibition & Issue 03 Launch

Flash. Issue 03 One-week-only exhibition:

19 — 25 January 2026
10am to 4pm daily
Terrace Greenhouse Gallery
223 South Terrace, South Fremantle, WA
Free entry


Project See & B is dedicated to amplifying under-represented voices in the creative industry. Issue 03 was made possible thanks to the support of The Blackbird Foundation.

 
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A Conversation with Gladys Heu