Art prints by Sophie Robinson — 35mm film photography exploring the tension between nature and architecture. Shot on analogue film across European locations, from London's Barbican to fields of wild daisies in Selsey. Produced in our Berlin studio on fine art paper and canvas.
Sophie Robinson — Architecture, Nature, and 35mm Film
Sophie Robinson is a photographer and architect based in London and the south of England. Her personal work explores the interplay between nature and constructed environments — how light, shadow, decay, reflection, and weather animate or condition man-made forms. This collection is shot entirely on 35mm film, assembled from locations across Europe, from London's Barbican to Portugal's Casa da Música.
What sets Robinson's photographs apart is the tension between structure and organic growth. Architectural surfaces become backdrops for wild daisies. Pathways lead through overgrown corridors. The images carry a quiet intensity — not dramatic, but persistently alive. The analogue process adds grain, warmth, and a material quality that digital photography rarely achieves.
Fine Art Prints and Canvas Prints by Sophie Robinson
Every Sophie Robinson print is produced in our Berlin studio using archival pigment inks rated for over 100 years of colour stability. Fine art paper prints use 225g matte stock — ideal for the tonal detail and grain inherent in 35mm film photography. Available in A3, 50x70cm, 70x100cm, and A0. Canvas prints use 400g cotton with a natural texture that complements Robinson's layered compositions, available in 30x40cm, 50x70cm, and 70x100cm. Framing options include oak, black, and walnut brown.
Robinson's work fits naturally alongside other photographers in our collection. For architectural subjects, see prints by Andreas Magnusson. For nature-focused photography with similar analogue warmth, browse work by Angela Seear.
Why Choose a Sophie Robinson Print
Robinson's photographs are not decorative in the conventional sense. They observe. A Barbican concrete wall becomes a study in texture. A field of Selsey daisies becomes a meditation on persistence. This is work that holds attention over time — images you notice differently in different light and different seasons. For anyone drawn to photography that sits between architecture and landscape, between built and grown, Robinson's prints are a considered choice.