Protest is often understood as loud and confrontational, but beneath the noise exists a complex mental space where personal experience meets collective purpose. This project dwells in that space. It asks what it feels like to stand among strangers united by a cause, to carry private doubts while expressing public conviction, and to move between empowerment and exhaustion. By centering the inner states of protesters, the work reframes protest as an intimate psychological act as much as a social one.
THE CROWD WITHIN focuses on the people who took part in the 2019 XR protests in London, moving past slogans and spectacle to explore the emotional and psychological forces behind collective action, and how those forces can be carried by a single person.
The project is shaped by close observation and empathetic engagement rather than commentary or judgment. It resists clear narratives of right and wrong, victory and failure. Instead, it holds ambiguity, fragmentation, and emotional overlap reflecting the lived experience of protest itself. Moments of tension sit alongside moments of care; determination exists beside uncertainty. These contradictions are not resolved, but allowed to coexist.
Ultimately, the project aims to humanize protest by revealing the mental and emotional labor involved in resistance. It invites viewers to slow down and consider protest not only as an act of opposition, but as a shared effort to make sense of an unstable world. By focusing on states of mind rather than outcomes, the work opens space to reflect on why people continue to protest when change feels distant, and how collective presence becomes a way to endure, imagine, and insist on possibility.














