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The

Artist

Liv Latricia Habel

Nominated in
2026
By
Copenhagen Photo Festival
Lives and Works in
Denmark
I am a Danish-American documentary photographer and visual artist dedicated to creating space for Black interiority and complexity. With a BA in photojournalism, I approach photography through storytelling with the awareness of genuine representation. Navigating from this perspective, I aim to capture the spaces where we are closest to our authentic self. As I turn my camera towards the reality of everyday-Black-existence in its simplicity and extraordinary, I want to uplift the voices and stories of afrodiasporic individuals. As I turn the camera on myself, I explore both personal and collective history. Raised between Copenhagen and Hamburg with African American heritage, I work across local and global contexts, using my practice as a language through which I connect with and express Black existence.
Projects
2022

Belonging

Belonging is an ongoing visual diary that explores what home means to me and how it is deeply rooted in my paternal family ties in and around Philadelphia, USA. Combining self-portraits, archival materials, and everyday moments captured in still photographs and moving images, this project documents my journey of reconnecting with my cultural and biological roots. In 2017, I met my family for the first time and as I reconnect with my heritage, I am forming profound bonds with relatives. By stepping into an unfamiliar landscape of cultures and emotions, I translate my narrative into images: capturing the joy of finally belonging, and the grief of longing for a past I can never fully reclaim. Throughout this process, I have collected family photographs from the US and juxtaposed them with photos from my life in Denmark and Germany as I wish to portray differences and similarities between my lived experience and my family's lived experience. By capturing everyday moments in reportage and portraits, I visually want to preserve moments that I have experienced in real time. By recreating moments and turning the camera on myself, echoing W.E.B. Du Bois’ concept of double consciousness, I want to bridge the gap that has existed between myself and my background. Growing up between Denmark and Germany, my practice and my gaze are shaped by my experience of existing as a black woman within predominantly white surroundings. I use my body as a tool to challenge my own narrative and understand my inherent gaze.
Liv Latricia Habel
was nominated by
Copenhagen Photo Festival
in
2026
Show all projects
Each year every member of the FUTURES European Photography Platform nominates a set of artists and projects to become part of the FUTURES network.

CPF was looking for talents residing in Denmark, Faroe Islands, Finland, Greenland,  Iceland or Sweden for at least 12 months, who were under 40 (born in 1986 or later), and who were either educated within the field of photography/art, or whose CV’s presented a continual professional experience within the last 3 years. 

CPF received a total of 56 applications from Denmark, Finland, Iceland and Sweden (based on an outreach to the entire Nordic region except Norway). 35 applicants were women, 17 men and 4 identified as Other. All submissions were considered by the festival’s program committee, which consists of the following members: Patricia Breinholm Bertram, Curator and Head of Communications at Martin Asbæk Gallery, Stinus Duch, publisher and founder of Disko Bay Books, Søren Pagter, head of Photo Journalism at the Danish School of Media and Journalism/DMJX, and Maja Dyrehauge Gregersen, Managing Director of Copenhagen Photo Festival. 

The programme committee prioritized diversity in genres and methods, a geographical spread in the final selection and not least the development potential and future perspectives based on the submitted projects. 

The collaboration between these artists within the Festival enriches the scene of European emerging photography with their individual perspectives and innovative approaches.

For 2026, the selected talents are Icelandic but Denmark-based María Kristín Antonsdóttir, Finnish Mari Mäntynen, Danish but Norway-based LouLou Buxbom, and Danish-American Liv Latricia Label.

Icelandic-born, Denmark-based artist María Kristín Antonsdóttir (b. 1990) explores how images shape identity, memory, and the stories we inherit. Since moving from Iceland to Denmark, she has worked with her family photographs and her father’s home videos, physically manipulating them to examine both the power and the fragility of the photographic archive. Through these alterations, Antonsdóttir reveals how images anchor our sense of self while simultaneously restricting it, exposing the tension between belonging, family bonds, and the desire to challenge fixed narratives within family photographs and personal archives. Influenced by hydrofeminism, her practice has recently expanded from the intimate family album to broader institutional archives, including historical police photography. By confronting these systems of visual classification, Antonsdóttir highlights how images have been used to define, control, and categorize bodies. Her work brings forward the fluidity of identity and the active role we play in shaping our own realities, inviting viewers to reflect on the invisible structures embedded within photographic memory.

Finnish artist Mari Mäntynen (b. 1997) works with photography, video, and performance to explore how people meet, interact, and understand one another. Often appearing in her own works, she constructs participatory situations that bring everyday tensions and social expectations to the surface. Through collaboration, play, and subtle provocation, Mäntynen challenges both herself and her participants to move at the edges of social norms and personal comfort. Her ongoing series Stranger (2022-) centres on first encounters. Each photograph is taken during Mäntynen’s initial meeting with a new person, resulting in an image co-created through negotiation: How do we position ourselves? Can we touch? What can we do together? The subject decides how they appear, while the shared experience and the conversations that follow reveal the unspoken rules that shape social behaviour. By treating the photographic act as a performative process, Mäntynen creates moments of friction that question assumptions, unsettle familiar roles, and open space for new forms of connection.

Danish artist LouLou Buxbom (b. 1995) uses experimental film to explore family dynamics, social heritage, and the formation of identity. Working with intimate and often self-exposing encounters, she examines how class, behaviour, attachment, and upbringing shape relationships and the ways we understand ourselves. Vulnerability and embarrassment become artistic tools, allowing Buxbom to push at emotional thresholds and reveal the subtle forces that define family structures. Her documentary series Too Stupid to Die on a Wednesday portrays her mother and three siblings, offering an unfiltered, multi-generational portrait. Each film captures a different family member’s life: an uncle living on the margins of society, a mother navigating isolation in Cuba, a planned seafaring journey, and an aunt redefining her mid-life circumstances. Through these portraits, Buxbom studies those who shaped her, using their stories as a mirror for her own identity. By prioritising intimacy over the camera itself, she creates works that question how background and inherited narratives continue to influence presence, relationships, and self-understanding.

Danish-American photographer Liv Latricia Habel (b. 1996) creates a visual diary that centres Black interiority, everyday life, and the emotional landscapes of afrodiasporic individuals. Raised between Copenhagen and Hamburg with African American heritage, she uses her camera to connect with, archive, and affirm Black existence. Her ongoing project Belonging follows her reconnection with her paternal family in and around Philadelphia, where self-portraits, family photographs, and moving images intertwine. Beginning with meeting her relatives for the first time in 2017, Label documents new relationships, the joy of belonging, and the grief of a past that cannot be reclaimed. By juxtaposing archival images from the United States with photographs from her upbringing in Denmark and Germany, she reflects on lineage, home, and American sociologist W.E.B. Du Bois' notion of double consciousness. At the same time, she points to the history of how racialised communities have been pictured, while insisting on spaces where Black life can appear closest to its authentic self.

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