Visual Essayist · Embodied Archivist · Interdisciplinary Writer

Courtney Eldridge is a London-based multidisciplinary artist whose work renders trauma not as spectacle, but as structure. She creates photographic and textual architectures that confront disappearance, aesthetic refusal, and embodied memory. Her practice is grounded in lived experience, harm reduction, and visual theory.

Eldridge is the creator and narrative architect of The Vanishing Point, a five-act visual theology that stages the body as archive, rupture, and refusal. Her work integrates captioned media, collaborative performance, and trauma-informed composition to interrogate surveillance, domesticity, and silence. Each image resists interpretation as content—instead, it asks to be witnessed as condition.

Her past work includes literary, institutional, and advocacy contributions, including the novella The Sparkle and the Weight and co-development of a national peer-led mental health curriculum. She is a 2025 Validated Emerging Artist through the Canada Council for the Arts and is preparing for her first touring exhibition.

Black and white photo of a woman sitting on a wooden floor, looking into a mirror, with her hand on her head and arm resting on her knee, wearing a sleeveless top, with visible tattoos on her arm, soft natural light coming through a window in the background.

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