
1 minute read
About Jeremy Abrahams
Jeremy Abrahams is a freelance portrait and social documentary photographer who has lived in Sheffield since 1988. Following redundancy from Barnsley Council in 2013, he completed a Foundation degree in photography at Sheffield College in 2014.
His work has focused on immigration and related issues, including Brexit, asylum detention and modern slavery. He has had two major solo exhibitions. ‘Arrivals: Making Sheffield Home’ was exhibited at Weston Park Museum from September 2016 to February 2017 and was seen by over 43,000 people. ‘Arrivals: Making Tyneside Home’ was at the Discovery Museum in Newcastle from June to September 2019 and was seen by over 50,000 people. Both exhibitions featured on BBC ‘Look North’ programmes.
Advertisement
Further exhibitions include ‘Remain / Leave’ supported by the University of Sheffield at Sheffield Train Station, November 2017; 'Unhidden in Plain Sight’, ethical images of trafficking and modern slavery commissioned by the University of Sheffield and exhibited in September 2018 in Sheffield Winter Garden and ‘Seeing Asylum: Life inside UK Immigration Removal Centres’, commissioned by Leeds Beckett University, exhibited in Leeds Church Institute October 2020 and Holy Trinity Church March 2022.
His most recent work is ‘Portrait of Middleton’ for the community of Middleton by Youlgreave.
Other clients include the University of Sheffield, the Lowry Theatre, The Traverse Theatre, Welsh National Opera, Scottish Opera, Doncaster Council and South Yorkshire Housing Association.
His images have appeared in The Guardian, the New York Times, the Yorkshire Post, the BBC website and others.

