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The

Artist

Signe Fuglesteg Luksengard

Nominated in
2026
By
Fotogalleriet
Lives and Works in
Oslo
Signe Fuglesteg Luksengard is a Norwegian photographer and artist working across photography, installation, and writing. With a background in documentary photography and material-based art, her practice explores the tension between control and release, and between belonging and distance. Rooted in a rural upbringing, her work examines how emotional experience, labour, and inherited expectations shape the body and leave physical and sensory traces over time. Moving between close observation and introspection, she investigates how history, care, and responsibility are carried—both individually and across generations. Through tactile, often spatial approaches, Luksengard seeks to slow down perception and create spaces for reflection, where presence, vulnerability, and memory can coexist.
Projects
2025

Diafragma

Diafragma (Published by Multipress) is a photographic book project that asks whether photography can give form to what cannot be directly seen — the invisible structures and tensions that run through natural cycles, female cycles and life cycles. The project examines how lived experience accumulates in the body over time, through breath, rhythm and internal movement. Grounded in an ecological mode of thinking, the work understands the body as inseparable from its environment, shaped by biological processes, social expectations and generational inheritance. Particular attention is given to the female body and to questions of vulnerability, endurance and the negotiation of space. The photographs move between details of the body, elements from the natural world and domestic interiors, approaching these motifs without hierarchy. Rather than constructing a linear narrative, the work operates through repetition, variation and pauses, reflecting cyclical rather than progressive time. Diafragma is realised as a tactile and open photographic book. The title refers to the diaphragm muscle, understood both as a physiological structure and as a conceptual site where emotional, physical and environmental forces intersect.
Signe Fuglesteg Luksengard
was nominated by
Fotogalleriet
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.

The selection was conducted through a structured committee process, bringing together both external expertise and internal perspective. Fotogalleriet appointed curator, film and media Researcher and co-founder of Films from the South festival Hilde Herming, and GT Nergaard, photographer, educator and principal at the Norwegian School of Photography. They were joined by Fotogalleriet's own Mikhela Greiner, photographer and project manager, and Dev Dhunsi, communications coordinator, photographer and FUTURES Alum.


Each member independently nominated a shortlist of artists, after which the panel convened to evaluate candidates and reached a unanimous final selection. The four nominated artists represent a breadth of approaches to photography and expanded image-making, united by a shared commitment to rigorous research, community engagement, and the interrogation of identity, memory, materiality and form.


Duy Nguyen's practice moves fluidly between photography, sculpture, installation, and writing, grounded in thorough field and archival research. His work explores the intersections of identity, migration, culture, and materiality, bringing three-dimensional and textual elements into conversation with the photographic image to create layered, cross-disciplinary bodies of work.


Minh Ngoc Nguyen works primarily with staged still-life photography, approaching the medium as both a visual practice and a cultural system. Their work examines how images produce, circulate, and stabilise meaning around identity, desire, and representation, interrogating the conventions and ideological underpinnings of photographic imagery itself.


Ikram Abdulkadir's practice is rooted in the documentary tradition, focusing on family and individuals within familiar urban and domestic settings. Through poetic portraiture and delicate observation, her work explores themes of care, community, and belonging with sensitivity and quiet precision.


Signe Luksengard works across photography, installation, and writing, drawing on a background in both documentary photography and material-based art. Her work examines how emotional experience, labour, and inherited expectations shape the body and leave physical and sensory traces over time, investigating how history, care, and responsibility are carried, both individually and across generations, creating spaces for reflection where presence, vulnerability, and memory can coexist.


The nominated artists were distinguished by the technical and conceptual rigour of their practices, and each reflect Fotogalleriet's commitment to supporting artists who engage deeply with their communities and whose work contributes meaningfully the expanding possibilities of photography as a medium. Fotogalleriet looks forward to supporting their participation in FUTURES 2026 and to the contribution each will make to the network.

Members of the jury:

Hilde Herming - Researcher and curator with a background in film and media studies.

GT Nergaard - Artist born and living in Norway with 30 years of experience as a professional photographer.

Dev Dhunsi - Norwegian–Indian artist. Dev is the Communications Coordinator at Fotogalleriet, as well as a FUTURES alum.

Mikhela Greiner - Norwegian-Canadian visual artist and cultural worker. Mikhela is the project manager and exhibition producer at Fotogalleriet.

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