No Color moves through spaces where pride meets prayer, celebration meets judgment. Shot in black and white, it speaks to the quiet erasure of individuality and the binaries shaped by belief and society. Juxtaposing moments from an LGBTQ parade with echoes of churches, the series strips away distraction, revealing bodies and truths caught between acceptance and rejection. In a world obsessed with clarity, No Color: The Presence of Conflict invites us to linger in the uncertain, unseen spaces in between.
No Color: The Presence of Conflict.
30.04.25 — Rui Wang
No Color moves through spaces where pride meets prayer, celebration meets judgment. Shot in black and white, it speaks to the quiet erasure of individuality and the binaries shaped by belief and society. Juxtaposing moments from an LGBTQ parade with echoes of churches, the series strips away distraction, revealing bodies and truths caught between acceptance and rejection. In a world obsessed with clarity, No Color: The Presence of Conflict invites us to linger in the uncertain, unseen spaces in between.
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