Partnerships
Otrovert: Facing a Different Direction Entirely
With Otrovert, a new photographic series and exhibition in Barry, Wales, photographer Lloyd Pursall brings his journey from Barry to London and Los Angeles back to where it all began. Developed in collaboration with JACK ARTS, the project draws a line from the Sunset Strip to the Barry high street, reimagining public space as a site for celebrating people, identity and community.
There’s a familiar narrative around success: you leave, you outgrow the place you started, move to the city, and then further still – across oceans if you can – to build something new. For photographer Lloyd Pursall, that story once felt true. Raised in Barry, a coastal town in South Wales, his early ambitions were shaped as much by a desire to get out as they were by the creative foundations surrounding him. London offered momentum, and Los Angeles offered scale. But it’s only in returning home that the full picture has come into focus.
Pursall’s work has long centred on people and their ambitions, tracing struggle alongside the persistent pull of lost dreams, perseverance, and the Welsh notion of llwyddiant, a translation of “success” that sits quietly behind it all. After studying fashion photography at London College of Fashion, his career took him into international editorial, celebrity, and commercial spaces, leading to projects like To Live and Try in LA, a highly acclaimed photographic series capturing young creatives navigating the precarious optimism of chasing a dream next door to Hollywood. There, amongst musicians, athletes and filmmakers, he found a shared language: collaboration, persistence, and the belief that success is something built collectively as much as individually.
But beneath that global trajectory, Barry remained a constant, if complicated, point of origin. “My idea of success was getting as far away from home as possible,” he reflects. It’s a sentiment familiar to many who grow up in smaller towns, where opportunity can feel distant and identity constrained. Yet the further he travelled, the clearer it became that the foundations laid there were not limitations in the traditional sense, but acting as the very thing that made his work resonate.
17.04.26
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