Geoffrey Brown is a Michigan-based fine art photographer and multidisciplinary artist whose work explores the intersection of the human form, forgotten environments, memory, and decay. Best known for his haunting environmental figure studies created in abandoned locations throughout the Midwest, Geoffrey has spent years documenting spaces that exist somewhere between history and disappearance.
His imagery blends classical influences with modern experimental techniques, often merging digital photography with organic film textures, encaustic processes, and layered visual abstraction. Drawing inspiration from artists such as H. R. Giger, Jan Saudek, Eadweard Muybridge, William Adolphe Bouguereau (and other classical academic painters), Geoffrey's work balances elegance with deterioration — beauty suspended inside impermanence.
Much of his recent work centers around large-scale conceptual series involving brutalist forms, architectural symbolism, and cinematic visual storytelling. His projects frequently incorporate remote landscapes, abandoned institutions, and sculptural set elements, transforming each series into both an exploration and a constructed mythos.
In addition to gallery exhibitions and published works, Brown is developing a growing body of cinematic documentary content focused on artistic process, exploration, and the hidden narratives embedded within forgotten places.
Contact: (231) 631-7917
gvbrown@gmail.com
