Projects

Modern Heirlooms: A Portrait Series

January 12, 2026

Fine art portrait from the Modern Heirlooms series featuring a sculptural collar made from repurposed materials

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Modern Heirlooms is an ongoing portrait series exploring ideas of legacy, beauty, and value in a contemporary world shaped by excess, speed, and disposability.

Rooted in the visual language of historical portraiture, the work draws on compositional restraint, controlled light, and a sense of stillness traditionally associated with Old Master painting. These references are deliberately set against materials drawn from modern consumer culture, objects that are ordinarily overlooked or discarded.

Fine art portrait from the Modern Heirlooms series with Renaissance-inspired headpiece created from everyday materials

Transforming everyday materials found in the studio such as packaging, coffee filters, frame cardboard, and ventilation tubing, I reimagine Renaissance-inspired headpieces and collars for the modern era. Works include The Balzo, created from leftover ventilation hose, an Anne Boleyn-inspired headpiece made from headphones and gold drawing pins, a sculptural ruff built from coffee filters, and an Elizabethan collar fashioned from a repurposed tablecloth and cardboard.

Detail of sculptural ruff from the Modern Heirlooms portrait series, constructed from repurposed paper

By reworking and recontextualising these materials, the series asks what we choose to preserve, and why? What elevates an object, an image, or a person to something worthy of our attention? And how might contemporary life be recorded with the same intention once reserved for formal portraiture? What began as a creative experiment became a way to question what we keep, what we discard, and how the ordinary can become extraordinary when treated with the same level of attention once reserved for painting.

Modern Heirlooms portrait using Dutch-inspired lighting and contemporary sculptural elements

The sitters are presented with quiet authority. There is no performance and no imposed narrative beyond presence itself. The portraits are not about trend, spectacle, or commentary, but about creating images that feel considered, restrained, and timeless, despite their modern origins.

Modern Heirlooms portrait series sits at the intersection of art, portraiture, and material culture. It operates both as a subtle critique of overconsumption and a focus on craftsmanship, detail, and attention. Each piece is conceived as a finished artwork, intended to endure beyond the moment in which it was made.

Fine art portrait from the Modern Heirlooms series featuring a sculptural veil created from repurposed bubble wrap.

This series forms part of my wider studio practice, shaped by over 25 years as a photographer and a Master’s degree in Art History, where portraiture is approached not as documentation, but as a form of legacy-making.

The studio and it’s approach has been referenced in Luxury Lifestyle Magazine, within their Best of the Rest editorial.

For press or editorial enquiries relating to this project, please contact jessica@thehouseofhenley.com

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BEHIND THE LENS

ABOUT sophie

I grew up in the quiet beauty of the Dorset countryside, 10 miles from where I currently live with  my husband, teenage boys and rescue dog.  

My father was an artist and worked from his studio next to our home, and ever since starting my photography career 25 years ago I longed to do the same.  My dream has now become a reality, and I now run my own photography studio where I have the privilege of creating timeless, stylish portraits that bring joy to me and - more importantly - my clients every day.  

 

© sophie lindsay photography 2024