• Know the Light & Composition Team - Photography Education, Online Photography Courses, Photography Awards, Photojournalism, Art Photography

Light & Composition University – a Non-profit University for Distance Learning and Research

Our core members, academics, and scholars work across different parts of the world and different time zones. Most of us are avid travellers — we work while we travel, drawn to the road less taken. We are, despite all of that, a thoroughly down-to-earth group who prefer to keep a low profile. If we happen to be in your part of the world, we’re more likely to be behind a camera than announcing ourselves.

Your quizzes and assignment might have made above 30,000 feet by one faculty member, then graded by another from the far end of the earth. Our team make sure they stay wired everyday, even in the wild. If you want to know some of our core team members, who made what Light & Composition University is today, here is a list of them below.

Prof. Jim Perceval

President

Ko Samui, Thailand Since 2008

Jim Perceval serves as the President of Light & Composition University, where he plays a central role in shaping the institution's vision, academic direction, and creative identity. Based on the tropical island of Ko Samui, Thailand — the very place where the idea of Light & Composition was first born — Jim remains deeply involved in the university's daily growth and development.

Although holding the presidential role, his involvement goes far beyond leadership. He actively contributes to course development, supports educational strategy, assists with social media outreach, helps oversee photography award initiatives, and provides copy editing and creative guidance across projects. His presence is woven into nearly every aspect of the university.

Originally from the United Kingdom, Jim also spent many years living in Western Canada — experiences that broadened his visual perspective and deepened his connection to nature. A passionate photographer for many years, he has built an extensive body of work in nature, wildlife, and landscape photography from locations around the world.

Prof. Nasrul Eam

Dean

Department of Art and Photography

Since 2010

Nasrul Eam has established a distinguished career spanning nearly two decades as an author, photographer, cinematographer, editor, educator, and art director. He currently holds the positions of Dean of the Department of Art and Photography, Head of the Department of Language and Linguistics, and Head of the Department of Mass Communication & Advertising at Light & Composition University.

Nasrul began his professional journey in 2000 in advertising, initially with Grey Global Group, where he collaborated with renowned organisations such as Nokia, Coca-Cola, Bata, and Telecom Malaysia. In 2006, he joined Paper Rhyme under WPP — a leading British multinational holding company in communications, advertising, public relations, technology, and commerce — serving as Head of Interactive. Concurrently, he played a pivotal role in establishing advertising and event management firms including Spell Bound and Final Avenue. During his tenure in advertising agencies from 2000 to 2007, Nasrul produced four documentaries, created 35 animated commercials, and developed over one hundred high-end corporate websites.

An accomplished author, he has written more than 50 books covering diverse topics in art, photography, cinematography, advertising, language, linguistics, and science. His multifaceted career reflects a deep commitment to creativity, education, and advancing knowledge across various disciplines.

Dr. Habib Chowdhury

Program Advisor

Perth, Western Australia Since 2018

Habib Chowdhury is the Program Advisor of Light & Composition University, helping to develop modules on optics, ethics in photography, aesthetics, and creative and technical writing. He lived and worked in Europe for several years and currently resides in Perth, Western Australia, where he obtained his PhD in Engineering. He brings substantial experience in university teaching and, alongside his academic work, practises as a freelance writer. He is a photography enthusiast who loves to explore different genres and philosophies of the visual arts.

Muhammed Nafeezul Bari

Program Advisor

Since 2008

Muhammed Nafeezul Bari is the Program Advisor of Light & Composition University, helping students navigate the structure and requirements of the degree programme. He began taking photographs with his father's Minolta as a kindergarten student and, after purchasing a Canon V300 in 2004, his passion expanded across many areas of photography. He is now involved in digital marketing and continues to photograph whatever catches his eye, most often with his phone.

Kirsten Bruning

Art Marketing Specialist

Department of Art & Photography

Cologne, Germany Since 2019

Kirsten Bruning works with Light & Composition University as an Art Marketing Specialist, representing the university's fine art photography initiatives and curated collections. Her interest in photography began in childhood, when she was introduced to analogue photography by her father — a passion that developed into a lifelong appreciation for the expressive power of the medium. Over the years she pursued formal studies in photography, completing her diploma and continuing with advanced study in the field. Her photographic interests focus on the subtle beauty of nature and the emotional narratives found in everyday moments, where careful observation reveals the deeper character of a scene.

Since 2019, Kirsten has been representing the university's gallery and fine art photography collections to collectors, institutions, and art enthusiasts internationally. She lives near Cologne with her family and continues to draw inspiration from the natural environment around her.

Imran Hoque

Director of Student Financial Aid & Scholarship

Montreal, Quebec, Canada Since 2015

Imran Hoque joined Light & Composition University as Director of Student Financial Aid & Scholarship in November 2010, reporting to Nasrul Eam. Alongside his work with the Light & Composition University Grant Committee, he oversees the university's financial administration, including financial planning and reporting, capital structures, cash management, and strategies for physical assets.

A McGill graduate in Accounting holding a Master's degree, Imran's keen interest in art, photography, and social media brought him naturally to Light & Composition. He lives in Montreal, Quebec, having first met Nasrul Eam during their school days, and enjoys spending time with friends and staying connected on social networks.

Afnan Naser Chowdhury

Development Director

Raleigh, North Carolina, USA Since 2015

Afnan Naser Chowdhury joined Light & Composition as Development Director in October 2010, reporting to Nasrul Eam. He ensures the Foundation serves the University across a full range of development functions, including prospect research. Prior to joining Light & Composition, he taught in Virginia and now resides in Raleigh, North Carolina. He met Nasrul Eam during his Bachelor's degree and was inspired to take up photography. He has had a keen interest in nature and painting since childhood.

Aude-Emilie Dorion

Features Editor & Photographer

Light & Composition University Press

Noumea, New Caledonia Since 2010

Aude-Emilie Dorion is a photographer and journalist from France who has spent over ten years covering hard news, with a recent specialisation in climate change, biodiversity, agriculture, energy, and other environment-related issues in the Pacific region, where she has been based since 2013. She is a former reporter for several newspapers and has joined the Internews Earth Journalism Network for the Pacific region, writing on climate and environmental issues across the Pacific islands. She also contributes to several regional magazines. A graduate of the National Multimedia Institute in Paris, she also teaches photography at university level.

Martin Meyer

Features Editor & Photographer

Hoedspruit, Limpopo, South Africa Since 2011

Martin Meyer joined Light & Composition in July 2011 as Features Editor & Photographer, reporting to Nasrul Eam. In this role he is responsible for writing and organising feature articles covering the latest photographic technologies and trends. Martin is a travel and wildlife photographer — a qualified DEAT/FGASA field guide and internationally accredited emergency responder with extensive experience leading 4WD safaris throughout South Africa. He has recently completed his Advanced Wilderness Medic qualification and is currently studying for his Advanced Mountain Walking Leader certification.

Felice Birmingham

Executive Editor

Currently travelling in Asia Since 2010

Felice Birmingham joined Light & Composition in May 2010 as Contributing Editor, responsible for overseeing editorial projects and providing final editing for all publications produced by the Light & Composition University Press. A Wisconsin, USA native, she holds a BA in Fine Arts. Felice spends much of her time travelling, drawing, and practising photography, always seeking a sense of connection with the natural world and the people in it.

Shahnaz Parvin

Contributing Photographer

Bangladesh Since 2008 – 2016

Shahnaz Parvin was an award-winning photojournalist and a passionate Bangladeshi photographer who passed away at the age of 32 on 14 August 2016. One of the finest photographers of her generation, she consistently ranked among the world's top photographers and was a devoted documentary photographer who used her lens to represent Bangladesh with depth and honesty. With the highest number of Photo of the Month and Photo of the Day Awards, she joined Light & Composition as Contributing Photographer in March 2013 and remained one of the most prolific contributors from South Asia until 2015.

Saniar Rahman Rahul

Contributing Photographer

Since 2008

Saniar Rahman Rahul was the first winner of the Photo of the Month Award at Light & Composition in June 2010. With a remarkable talent for wildlife photography, he joined as Contributing Photographer in September 2011. Rahul grew up in a family where photography was part of everyday life — his father was deeply passionate about the medium. In 2005, he joined G3, a specialist wing of Grey Worldwide, before moving to Paper Rhyme two years later. Alongside his work with Light & Composition, Saniar serves as Art Director at Grey Worldwide, one of the ten largest advertising agencies in the world.

Henrik Johansson

Architect & Built Environment Critic

Architecture, Built Space & the Conversation Between Structure and Light
554 photographs reviewed

Henrik Johansson brings an architect's understanding of space, movement, and structure to photography criticism, and has contributed to Light & Composition since 2016. He is drawn by a conviction that most architectural photographs misrepresent buildings — by flattening what is spatial, by freezing what is temporal, by removing the people who give structures their reason for existing. He approaches built-environment photography with a practitioner's knowledge of what a photograph can and cannot capture about a space.

Architecture exists in time and movement. A building is not a single view — it is a sequence of experiences. The architectural photograph is always a lie of convenience. The great ones acknowledge this honestly; they find the single frame that captures not what the building looks like but what it feels like to be inside it.

Victoria Ashby

Wildlife Photographer & Conservation Ethics Critic

Wildlife, Nature & the Ethics of the Unseen Moment
487 photographs reviewed

Victoria Ashby brings a wildlife photographer's ethics and field-earned patience to criticism. She has contributed to Light & Composition since 2017 and is the panel's most demanding voice on the distinction between an image that reveals an animal's true behaviour and one that merely exploits proximity. She has little patience for wildlife photography that puts the image ahead of the animal.

A wildlife photograph is a record of a relationship between the photographer and the natural world. If that relationship involved disturbance, deception, or harm — to the animal or its habitat — the image is compromised before the shutter fires. Patience is not a technique. It is an ethical position.

Kofi Asante

Photojournalist & Human Story Critic

Intimate Portraiture, Reportage & Lives Told Truthfully
519 photographs reviewed

Kofi Asante brings a working journalist's understanding of what it takes to earn the trust required to make a genuinely intimate portrait — and a corresponding intolerance for portraits that take rather than receive. He has contributed to Light & Composition since 2018.

The best portrait is a gift, not a capture. The photographer who earns a subject's trust makes a different image than the photographer who simply presses the shutter while someone is near. You can see the difference. It lives in the eyes. It lives in the hands.

Rosa Park-Chen

Former Athlete & Peak-Moment Critic

Sports, Action & the Fraction of a Second That Matters
281 photographs reviewed

Rosa Park-Chen brings a former athlete's understanding of peak moment to photography criticism: the precise physical knowledge of what a body at maximum effort looks like, and the ability to judge whether a photograph captured the right millisecond or the next one. She has contributed to Light & Composition since 2020.

In sports photography, a tenth of a second is the difference between a great photograph and a record of what almost happened. The peak moment in athletics is physiologically precise — there is one frame where the body is at maximum extension, maximum tension, maximum expression. One. The photograph either found it or it did not.

Catherine Byrne

Photo Historian & Archive Critic

Photographic History, Canon & the Long View
637 photographs reviewed

Catherine Byrne brings 180 years of photographic history to every review — the ability to place a contemporary image in the full lineage of the medium, from Talbot's earliest calotypes to today's computational photography. Her scholarly background is in the history of photography and she has contributed to Light & Composition since 2017. She is the panel's most historically demanding voice.

Every photograph exists in conversation with every photograph that came before it. Originality is not the absence of influence — it is what you do with the influences you cannot escape. I ask of every image: where does this sit in the long conversation? What does it say that has not been said before, and what does it say better?

Lena Brandstrom

Optical Scientist & Fine Detail Critic

Macro Photography, Optics & the Science of the Seen
1,395 photographs reviewed

Lena Brandstrom brings deep scientific knowledge of optics to photography criticism — the behaviour of light through glass, the biology of what the human retina can and cannot resolve, the precise moment where a lens's maximum resolution meets the subject's finest detail. She has contributed to Light & Composition since 2012 and is the panel's most forensically precise reviewer.

The photograph reveals what the eye cannot hold. The lens resolves beyond the limits of human vision. This is photography's extraordinary gift — and its most demanding challenge. Most photographers never fully understand what their lens is capable of.

Mei-Ling Chen

Visual Mathematician & Abstract Form Critic

Pattern, Geometry, Abstract Form & Visual Mathematics
651 photographs reviewed

Mei-Ling Chen, whose background spans visual design and applied mathematics, has contributed to Light & Composition since 2015. She is the panel's most analytical voice — the critic who, before considering what a photograph means, maps its geometry, traces its diagonals, and calculates the ratio of dark to light. She believes every great photograph solves a spatial problem.

The frame is a mathematical space. Every element in it has a weight, a vector, a relationship to every other element. Great photography is great geometry — whether the photographer knows it or not.

Franz Hubner

Astronomer & Night Photography Critic

Night Photography, Astrophotography & the Scale of the Cosmos
177 photographs reviewed

Franz Hubner came to photography as a means of documenting what the naked eye can no longer easily see — the night sky as it was before light pollution narrowed our view of it. He has contributed to Light & Composition since 2020 and brings a cosmologist's sense of scale — the ability to see a photograph of a star-filled sky as a document of light that has been travelling for millions of years to arrive at a sensor in this particular photographer's hands.

A photograph of the night sky is the longest collaboration in the history of art. The light in the frame left its source before humans existed. The photographer, the camera, the sensor — all are merely the last step in a journey of unimaginable length. That responsibility deserves to be taken seriously.

Sophie Delacroix

Psychologist & Emotional Response Critic

Emotional Narrative, Viewer Response & Psychological Impact
1,233 photographs reviewed

Sophie Delacroix approaches photography criticism through the lens of perceptual psychology. She has been with Light & Composition since 2013. Her criticism focuses not on what is in the image but on what the image does — the sequence of emotional and cognitive responses it triggers in a viewer who has never seen it before and the one who returns to it a year later.

The photograph is not the thing in the frame. The photograph is what happens in the body of the person looking at it. A great image alters the viewer's physiology — pulse, breath, the specific sadness of a certain blue.

James Rokeby

Technical Director & EXIF Analyst

Camera Craft & Technical Execution
1,380 photographs reviewed

James Rokeby brings an engineer's understanding of optics to photography criticism, making him perhaps the most technically demanding reviewer in the field. He has contributed to Light & Composition since 2013. For James, creative intent is inseparable from technical decision: if the numbers don't back up the vision, the vision fails.

Every creative decision leaves a trace in the EXIF data. Aperture, shutter, ISO — these are not settings, they are arguments. Bad technical choices cannot be rescued by good subjects.

Santiago Reyes

Street Photographer & Urban Decisive-Moment Critic

Street Photography, The City & the Unrepeatable Instant
508 photographs reviewed

Santiago Reyes has been making and studying street photographs with a lifelong conviction that the medium is the most democratic art form ever invented — and also the most ruthlessly honest about whether you were paying attention. He has contributed to Light & Composition since 2018.

The street gives you one chance. It does not repeat the moment because you were not ready, because the light was wrong, because you hesitated. The decisive moment is decisive because it will not wait. The question I ask every street photograph: did the photographer press the shutter at the right fraction of a second, or at the next one?

Isabelle Fontenay

Colour Theorist & Contributing Editor

Colour Harmony, Tone & Atmospheric Light
1,701 photographs reviewed

Isabelle Fontenay has been a contributing editor at Light & Composition since 2009. Shaped by the French tradition of art criticism and a deep grounding in colour theory, she approaches every photograph as a colour event first — a meeting of pigments, temperatures, and emotional resonances that either harmonise or quarrel. She writes the longest sentences of any critic on the panel, and considers brevity a form of cowardice.

Colour is not decoration. Colour is the first language of an image — it speaks before the subject does, before the eye has time to name what it sees. A photograph's emotional truth lives in its palette.

Marcus Trent

Documentary Photographer & Humanist Critic

Human Truth, Documentary & The Decisive Moment
885 photographs reviewed

Marcus Trent brings a photojournalist's intolerance for artifice and his deep conviction that every worthwhile photograph is ultimately about a human being — either because a human being is in it, or because a human being felt something extraordinary in the moment they pressed the shutter. He has been reviewing for Light & Composition since 2015.

Photography is a human act before it is an aesthetic one. The question I ask every image: did the person behind the camera feel something true? If they did, the camera finds a way to carry it.

Rafael Ortega

Former Cinematographer & Motion Critic

Shutter Technique, Motion & the Cinematic Single Frame
970 photographs reviewed

Rafael Ortega approaches the single frame with the same rigour he gives to a sequence, and brings a filmmaker's obsession with time, rhythm, and the weight of a single held image to every review. He has been reviewing for Light & Composition since 2014.

A great photograph is a film that refused to move. Everything you need is in that one frame — the before, the after, the cut that never came. The question is whether the photographer understood what they were holding when the shutter closed.

Priya Sharma

Aesthetics Scholar & Zen Minimalism Critic

Negative Space, Minimalism & the Japanese Aesthetic
1,352 photographs reviewed

Priya Sharma, whose thinking is grounded in East Asian aesthetics and Japanese visual philosophy, has contributed to Light & Composition since 2012. Her criticism draws on the Japanese concept of Ma — the meaningful pause, the productive emptiness — and she is perhaps the only critic on the panel who considers what a photograph leaves out to be as important as what it includes.

Restraint is the hardest discipline in photography. Anyone can fill a frame. The photographer who can empty one — who can trust the silence — is rare. Ma: the pause that holds more than words.

Amelia Cross

Contributing Writer

Grief, Absence & Negative Space
274 essays in the L&C Visual Archive

Amelia Cross has contributed to Light & Composition since 2015. Her Reflections meditate on what is no longer there — the absence with a shape, the gap left by something specific that once existed. Amelia's writing is never vague in its grief: she names what is gone, precisely, and finds in that precision a kind of staying power. Readers return to her pieces at particular times of year. They tend to know exactly why.

Tom Bretherton

Contributing Writer

Storytelling & Travel Writing
602 essays in the L&C Visual Archive

Tom Bretherton has spent the better part of two decades travelling, and the better part of that time paying attention. He has contributed to Light & Composition since 2014 with a writer's instinct for the particular — the name of a town, the timing of a conversation, the kind of detail that makes a story feel true. His Reflections are brief narratives that arrive at something universal by way of somewhere very specific.

Astrid Halvorsen

Contributing Writer

Light, Weather & Atmospheric Emotion
240 essays in the L&C Visual Archive

Astrid Halvorsen is a writer for whom the relationship between light and emotion is a daily and serious matter. She has contributed to Light & Composition since 2018, bringing a meteorologist's vocabulary and a poet's ear — the ability to name precisely what different qualities of light do to the human interior. Readers from every climate immediately recognise what she is describing.

Rashid Noor

Contributing Writer

Philosophy & the Human Condition
500 essays in the L&C Visual Archive

Rashid Noor is a writer and essayist whose work spans photography, philosophy, and the study of human restlessness. He has contributed to Light & Composition since 2013. A photograph for Rashid is always a question in disguise — and his Reflections resist easy answers, sitting instead with the productive discomfort that a good question leaves behind.

Farida Boussouf

Contributing Writer

Nocturnal Thought & Unguarded Honesty
126 essays in the L&C Visual Archive

Farida Boussouf is a writer whose best thinking happens between two and four in the morning. She has contributed to Light & Composition since 2019, bringing a rare willingness to write what people actually feel rather than what they intend to feel. Her pieces have the quality of thoughts written before sleep could soften them — honest, sometimes unsettling, always true. Readers describe them as the Reflections they return to at the hours she wrote them.

Gabriel Ndidi

Contributing Writer

Childhood Memory & First-Time Wonder
135 essays in the L&C Visual Archive

Gabriel Ndidi has been writing about memory — specifically the memory of being a child encountering an adult world — since he was old enough to realise how much of that original wonder he had managed to keep. He has contributed to Light & Composition since 2020. His pieces open in the specific world of a childhood moment and find, in the adult looking at a photograph, the child who first understood that the world was larger than expected. Readers describe them as the most quietly joyful Reflections on the platform.

Beatriz Andrade

Contributing Writer

Urban Writing & City Observation
216 essays in the L&C Visual Archive

Beatriz Andrade is a writer and city-walker who has spent years finding meaning in streets, cafés, trams, and the particular quality of light in cities at different hours. She has contributed to Light & Composition since 2019 with a flâneur's instinct for the significant detail in the ordinary urban moment. Her Reflections begin somewhere specific — a corner, a café at midnight, a train platform in winter — and arrive, by a route that feels inevitable, somewhere universal.

Marta Vidal

Contributing Writer

Memory, Objects & Elegiac Prose
379 essays in the L&C Visual Archive

Marta Vidal is a writer and archivist whose work explores what physical objects hold — letters, worn photographs, things kept against all practical reason. She has contributed to Light & Composition since 2016. A photograph for Marta is always a form of preservation, something the photographer chose to keep. Her Reflections open with a specific object and arrive, gently, at what it means when the moment has long passed.

Margaret Holt

Contributing Writer

Long-form Essays & Philosophical Reflection
1,235 essays in the L&C Visual Archive

Margaret Holt has been writing for Light & Composition since 2009 — she was among the earliest contributors to the platform. Her Reflections take the long way round: she circles an idea from a distance, picking up references from history, science, and everyday observation before arriving, unhurried, at the centre. Readers who come expecting a quick take learn to slow down. Those who slow down tend not to stop.