Cameron Postforoosh, a New York - based artist whose career spans fashion, photography and film, explored skateboarding as his first medium. The concept of performing tricks that surprise and delight became ingrained in him — and is the thinking he applies to art. His aesthetic mixes historic mediums with futuristic concepts, creating unexpected but recognizable imagery. Known for reimagining the mechanics of image - making as live spectacle, Postforoosh works with a rare 8x10 inch large format camera and discontinued Polaroid film stock, transforming each exposure into a performative act of unveiling.
In this body of work, Postforoosh turns his lens on Lana Rhoades, engaging the subject not as icon, but as collaborator in a process of exposure, revelation, and recontextualization. Drawing upon her own personal memorabilia, he stages intimate tableaus that merge historic photographic craft with futuristic conceptual frameworks. The act of pulling open each Polaroid becomes both literal and metaphorical — a moment of surprise, intimacy, and confrontation with image and identity.