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Beaut, 2017
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Copperhead
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Darcy, 2017
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E20
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E21
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F21
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F22a
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F23
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F24
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F25
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F26
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F28
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F29
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F31
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George Scott
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Floriculture 1
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Floriculture 2
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Floriculture 3
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Floriculture A12
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Floriculture A13
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Floriculture A4
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Floriculture A7
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Floriculture B3
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Floriculture C10
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Floriculture C12
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Floriculture C16.3
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Floriculture C4
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Floriculture C6
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Floriculture C7
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Floriculture E10.1
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Floriculture E7.2
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Floriculture E8.1
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Floriculture F10.1.3
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Floriculture F13
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Floriculture F17.2
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Floriculture F19
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Floriculture F2.1
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Floriculture F3
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Floriculture F9
Lisa Creagh graduated from Goldsmiths in 1994, and more recently, with a Masters in Photography from Brighton University. Between 1997 and 2001 she lived and worked as an artist in New York, teaching digital imaging and curating exhibitions. Upon her return she founded The Brighton Photo Fringe in 2003, a network of photographers, still running in conjunction with the Brighton Photo Biennial.
As a producer and curator she has delivered large-scale photographic projects for international artists and delivered talks at various colleges. In 2006 she received critical acclaim for the originality and collaborative nature of ‘Tidy Street’ where she transformed a street in Brighton in to a series of light-boxes utilizing the windows of small terraced houses. Prior to her MA she was awarded two Arts Council England Individual Artists Awards.
Her current ongoing project, ‘The Instant Garden’ was begun in 2008 and is inspired by Dutch Flower paintings, in particular those by Rachel Ruysch (1664 – 1750). The work has been widely exhibited and was recently awarded a development grant by The Arts Council of England. Creagh writes, “The Instant Garden is a new kind of photograph, one ‘made’ not ‘taken’, but no less beautiful for being artificially ‘natural’.