Often inspired by intimate day-to-day experiences from her formative years, Alma Berrow’s (b. 1992, United Kingdom) nostalgic and sometimes uncanny artistic vocabulary is inextricably linked to personal memory. Her practice re-investigates the genre of still life through portrayal of contemporary taboos and zeit-geist revelaed by the ubiquitious pocket litter left behind. Berrow succeeds in her ability to transform ordinary objects into art pieces that are both humorous and other-worldly beautiful. Berrow lives and works in London, previously attending Falmouth University for Art and Textiles. It was over her first lockdown, due to Covid-19, that she began to explore ceramics as her primary medium. Since then, Berrow has participated in a number of solo and group shows, including Philip's exhibition Seeing Red (2024) and her most recent solo show at Lamb Gallery, Echo (2023). In 2021, Berrow was part of Sotheby’s (Women) Artists auction, with her work presented alongside works by Lavinia Fontana, Dorothea Tanning, Cindy Sherman and Helen Frankenthaler.