Back to News


Domestic Dialogues: Meet the Artists








Terrace Collective proudly introduces the seven incredible artists featured in Domestic Dialogues. This exhibition brings together a diverse group of creatives, each exploring the intricate connections between space, memory, and identity through their unique artistic practices. Though many share a background in architecture, their work spans various mediums, including photography, sculpture, video, and sound art.



Fiona Cuypers-Stanienda
Fiona Cuypers-Stanienda is a social documentary photographer strongly influenced by her architectural background. Working exclusively with analogue photography, she captures the relationship between people, objects, and architectural spaces. Her humanistic approach treats these elements equally, revealing how the built environment shapes identity and experience. Through her lens, Fiona creates thoughtful visual narratives that explore the subtle, often unseen connections between humans and the spaces they inhabit.


Jack Hardy
Jack Hardy is an artist and spatial designer based in London. His work spans large and small-scale installations, toys, and sculptures, often inspired by his love of carnival and play. With a background in designing award-winning playspaces, Jack blends creativity with functionality in his work. He also lectures in architecture at Oxford Brookes and the Architectural Association, contributing to his deep engagement with the relationship between space, performance, and play.

Isabel Law

Isabel Law is an artist, creative and researcher based in London and Berlin. Her work examines our extended ecologies and confronts our complex relationships with(in) nature in urban environments, and spaces where humans leave a heavy footprint. Through installations, objects and experiences, her work seeks to elicit empathy and curiosity in the Other – from our human, to more-than-human neighbours – as a means to process the ongoing degradation of our planet, and increasing divisions in our world.

Pascal Loschetter (PALO)

Pascal Loschetter is a street artist and architect based in Hackney, London. His work features a distinct visual language that intertwines geometric abstractions with organic and mechanical forms. Inspired by his architectural background, Pascal's murals and paintings are dense compositions of shapes that evoke anatomy, nature, and machinery. His pieces, whether on large walls or smaller canvases, create a dynamic sense of movement and transformation.

Russell Royer

Russell Royer is a multidisciplinary artist whose work explores the aesthetics of aspiration in the Caribbean and its Diaspora. With a background in performance and architecture, he creates interactive functional objects. His jewellery pieces, inspired by ancient Caribbean artefacts and traditional masquerades, are designed with vibrant movement in mind. Russell also brings his hands-on approach to costume design, reanimating 'Adornos'—small pottery figures—as carnival characters to reconnect with their cultural roots.

Meaghan Stewart

Meaghan Stewart is an interdisciplinary artist working with photo, video, and text. Her practice explores the intersection between memory and experience, often focusing on the threshold between real and virtual spaces. Inspired by themes of the everyday and domestic life, Meaghan’s work uses techniques like collaging and splicing to evoke layered emotional and intellectual responses. By navigating liminal spaces and blending textures and sound, she creates immersive, multi-sensory experiences that challenge conventional perceptions of space and memory.


Anna Zozulya (ANNA Z)

Anna Zozulya an architect and electronic music artist whose work bridges the gap between the raw and digital. With a focus on exploring the connections between nature and technology, Anna integrates organic elements with electronic soundscapes, creating immersive experiences that challenge conventional boundaries. As the founder of KOMI, she curates experimental music performances, drawing on a wide range of genres, from IDM and techno to ambient and folk, all while maintaining a deep connection to the natural world.

Terrace Collective is a platform that brings together architecture and art, curating exhibitions, discussions, workshops, and events that explore the intersection of space, memory, and identity. Through collaborative projects, we foster a deeper dialogue between creative disciplines, pushing the boundaries of how art and architecture shape our world.
About the Terrace
Meet the Terrace