top of page

A View From Inside

2012

Woman in floral dress standing in a yellow 18th-century drawing room with portrait paintings, a fox, and a crow figure on the floor

I worked with people over a one year period who experience episodes of psychosis to create these 10 portraits. Whilst the people photographed here all appear entirely ‘normal’, their ability to function within society has, to varying degrees, been affected by the experience of a psychotic ‘disorder’ such as Bipolar or Schizophrenia. The grand 18th Century settings have been altered, both digitally and physically to form ‘stage sets’ for the internal experience of each person when he or she is not in consensual reality. Visual, auditory and other sensory phenomena that occur during a psychotic episode contradict accepted notions of 'reality', and yet for one person they are absolutely real. These highly constructed settings, each incorporating a view through a window and an array of significant objects, give some clue to each individual’s private world.

This work asks what we mean by reality. It also aims to reduce the stigma that surrounds those who experience mental health issues.

A book that includes statements by each participant and essays by Canadian cultural theorist, Jeanne Randolph and British psychiatrist, Professor Graham Thornicroft accompanies the photographs.

Ten digital C-Types, 76 x 100cm, framed, and limited edition (800) artists book.

00:00 / 01:04
00:00 / 01:04
00:00 / 01:04

​© Alexa Wright, 2026

bottom of page