fArsta

  • Dates
    2023 - Ongoing
  • Author
  • Topics Contemporary Issues, Documentary, Photobooks
  • Location Farsta, Sweden

fArsta is a long-term photographic project exploring how stigma, fear, and media narratives shape our sense of place and belonging. Through portraits and everyday scenes, it challenges stereotypes and highlights complexity.

"fArsta" is a long-term photography project exploring how stigma, fear, and mediated stories shape

the way we understand place and belonging. The project grew out of my own move to Farsta after

living more than twenty years in neighboring areas. Despite being so close geographically, my

impression of the place was largely shaped by media portrayals focused on violence, crime, and

social unrest.

This work begins with that experience and asks how images—both internal and external—move us, shape

our gaze, and influence how we physically navigate public spaces. By intentionally walking through

the neighborhood at night and in the evening, especially in places that initially felt unsafe, the

project has become an exploration of how the relationship between place, body, and perception can

be redefined through presence, attention, and dialogue.

At the heart of this project are portraits. Every photograph is preceded by a conversation,

creating a mutual exchange rather than a one-sided documentation. The portraits are deliberately

stripped of dramatic lighting and staging to avoid reinforcing stereotypes. The people photographed

are presented without biographical explanations; each image is meant to work as a direct encounter

between viewer and individual, rather than as a representation of a social category.

Alongside the portraits, I also capture everyday moments, architecture, and spontaneous situations.

Farsta is approached with the same visual and methodological principles as any Swedish small town.

This shifts the perspective from what’s extraordinary to what’s ongoing, from the dramatic to the

everyday.

This project is also rooted in a wider contemporary context. Discussions about segregation,

integration, and so-called ‘mixing’ have been central in political and media debates in recent

years. Yet, a simplified and geographically distant view of the suburb is often repeated, painting

it as solely problematic. Farsta doesn’t aim to swap one narrative for another, but rather to

emphasize complexity. By allowing space for presence and daily life, the social and cultural

diversity already present becomes visible, as does the place’s inherent resilience and potential.

By consistently focusing on the local, Farsta opens up a broader conversation about how we see,

talk about, and imagine each other and the places we call home.