Dan Bernard is a photographer whose work is shaped by travel, remoteness and the quiet presence of human-made structures in extreme landscapes. Having been fortunate enough to travel to places including Mongolia, Morocco, Svalbard, Syria and the Falkland Islands, he...
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Dan Bernard is a photographer whose work is shaped by travel, remoteness and the quiet presence of human-made structures in extreme landscapes. Having been fortunate enough to travel to places including Mongolia, Morocco, Svalbard, Syria and the Falkland Islands, he has become increasingly drawn to small examples of everyday architecture in its simplest form.
His photographs often focus on huts, shelters, temporary buildings and isolated dwellings, examining how these modest structures sit within vast, exposed environments. Through this work, he explores ideas of shelter, survival, scale and the fragile human need to make a place feel usable, even at the edge of the world.