Photography Olgac BozalpArt & Photography / LightboxArt & Photography / LightboxThese uncanny photographs document the search for belongingOlgaç Bozalp’s latest book, Leaving One Home for Another, investigates the disorientating nature of displacement and migration in a series of surreal imagesShareLink copied ✔️January 3, 2025January 3, 2025TextAmah-Rose McKnight-AbramsOlgac Bozalp, Leaving One Home for Another (2024) Photographer Olgaç Bozalp is known for his uncanny images provocatively blending traditionally Eastern with Western aesthetics and documentary with staged scenes. The Turkish-born photographer’s latest photo book, Leaving One Home for Another (work from which was originally displayed earlier this year in The Elephant in the Room: Provocations on Artificial Intelligence, a collaborative event by FOAM Magazine, Der Greif, The Photographers’ Gallery and Photoworks at Paris Photo) explores his relationship with home and place, investigating displacement, migration and the experience of familiarity, the unknown, distance and proximity through his unique lens. Shot between 2018 and 2022, it documents the photographer’s “constantly moving from one place to another”. “I didn’t have a place of my own. I was constantly sleeping somewhere else, my friend’s room, a living room… I really wanted to travel, and I didn’t want to pay rent in London,” Bozalp tells Dazed. This period caused him to reflect on his desire for a nomadic lifestyle but also, crucially, the wider implications and causes of migration. “Of course, this happens for political reasons, conflict reasons and impersonal reasons as well. I was wondering about all these reasons and that’s how it started.” Alongside his photographs made while travelling around the world, we encounter Bozalp’s unpredictable yet strangely methodical pictures of his hometown in Turkey – which he visits frequently, often shooting landscapes, family and friends – and his vision of travels around locations including Uzbekistan, Iran, Tel Aviv and Cyprus. “I was travelling quite a lot with my commissioned work, I travelled to 14 or 15 countries in that period of time,” he recalls. “I’d try to find something wherever I was, I looked for scenes that looked staged but without my intervention. I kept searching for this mix.” Creating striking tableaux playing with AI-created aesthetics, he also applies these unique methods to the orchestrated scenes shot with models. His pictures are impregnated with uncanny details – multiple bodies in monochrome spilling out of vehicles or piled on top of one another, a gilet dried into the mud, mattresses covered in carnations and a glittering dingy in a pile of flotsam. Together, they provide a surreal and compelling meditation on migration, the concept of the familiar and the strange, and our precarious, shifting sense of belonging. Visit the gallery above for a closer look. Leaving One Home for Another is available now and can be purchased here. Olgac Bozalp, Leaving One Home for Another (2024)Photography Olgac BozalpEscape the algorithm! Get The DropEmail address SIGN UP Get must-see stories direct to your inbox every weekday. Privacy policy Thank you. You have been subscribed Privacy policy Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.READ MOREThese playfully erotic zines capture Williamsburg’s 00s art scene‘This show is like a world’: Collier Schorr on her major new exhibition GANNIGANNI is yearning for a dreamy summer – and so are we La dolce vita: These photos explore Cortina beyond the Olympic hypeDazed Club handpicked this curator for a new show in London FILAFrom track to concrete: Fila reimagines sportswear in the city for AW26Catherine Opie on ‘perverts’, Heated Rivalry and photographing neo-NazisCandid photos capture life inside a women’s prison in MexicoLife lessons from the legendary photographer Larry SultanThese intimate photos show the multiplicity of ‘Dykes’The most loved photo stories from February 2026The best art and photography shows to see in March 2026Escape the algorithm! Get The DropEmail address SIGN UP Get must-see stories direct to your inbox every weekday. Privacy policy Thank you. You have been subscribed Privacy policy