Support The Mirror Project
Film • Photography Exhibition • Community Screenings
A photography exhibition born from the making of The Mirror Project—celebrating courage, connection, and the quiet moments that carried us through.
About the Project
The Mirror Project Photography Exhibition is a visual extension of the documentary The Mirror Project.
For more than five years, I documented one of the most uncertain chapters of my life while also following the journeys of other women living with breast cancer. Alongside the documentary, I captured thousands of photographs—moments of fear, healing, family, friendship, resilience, and the quiet beauty of everyday life.
Many of these photographs have never been seen before.
Some of the women whose stories became part of this project have since passed away. Although they are no longer with us, their portraits, voices, hopes, and messages continue to live through these photographs and the documentary.
This exhibition brings those images together as a travelling collection, presented alongside community screenings of The Mirror Project. Together, they create spaces where audiences can pause, reflect, share experiences, and continue conversations that extend beyond the screen.
More than a story about cancer, this project is a celebration of courage, vulnerability, friendship, love, and the resilience of women—and the families and communities who stand beside them.
Why I'm Raising Funds
This campaign will help bring The Mirror Project Photography Exhibition to life and enable it to travel to communities, cultural spaces, hospitals, universities, and public venues alongside the documentary.
Your support will help fund:
Fine art printing and professional framing Exhibition design, production, and installation Music licensing for exhibition and community screenings Archival-quality photography production Community screenings and post-screening discussions Educational materials and public engagement activities Touring the exhibition alongside the documentary
Every contribution helps transform five years of photographs into a public experience where stories can continue to inspire, connect, and create meaningful conversations.
Why It Matters
Photography asks us to slow down.
Sometimes a single photograph reveals what moving images cannot.
I hope this exhibition creates space for people living with cancer, their families, caregivers, and anyone facing uncertainty to feel seen, understood, and less alone.
I hope it encourages conversations about early detection, resilience, and the quiet beauty that can still exist during life's most difficult moments.
Above all, I hope these photographs remind us that even in uncertainty, there is still love, connection, and hope—and that no one has to walk this journey alone.