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Feeding a Swan to a Wolf presents a collaboration shaped by repetition, tension and a shared interest in how desire takes form. On view from June 26 to September 12, 2026 at Filter Photo, the project by RAGER — Marzena Abrahamik and Rebecca Kressley — brings together photography, video and sound in a body of work that has been unfolding since 2024.
Rather than treating collaboration as a fixed division of labor, RAGER moves between joint and individual production. That rhythm gives the project its structure. The work returns again and again to images and forms that feel suspended, as if caught between attraction and instability. Repetition does not flatten them. It sharpens the sense that longing, fantasy and recognition remain difficult to separate.
Abrahamik’s background runs through the project in a clear way. Born in Poland and raised in Greece, she has built a practice around photography’s ability to alter visual habits, with work shaped by migration, personal history and the pull of survival fantasies. Her images often connect lighting, color and gesture to larger historical or emotional frames, creating series that feel formally controlled but psychologically open.
Kressley, based in Amsterdam, brings a different but related approach. Her practice moves across mediums, with sound forming a consistent thread, and returns to questions of excess, sexuality, intractability and creativity. That range gives the collaboration its unsettled energy. The work does not settle into a single reading of desire. Instead, it treats desire as something performed, repeated and revised through image and sound.
The title itself suggests friction rather than harmony.
Feeding a Swan to a Wolf carries a sense of beauty placed under threat, or tenderness exposed to force. In the exhibition, that tension reads less as metaphor than as method. The work stays with contradiction, and that is where its force lies.
Image:
Courtesy of Filter Photo