Featuring works from artists worldwide.

Welcome To Phonebooks in the attic Art Gallery

We take pride in curating a collection that showcases a wide range of artistic talent.

Our Gallery includes works devised by established Artists who have honed their craft over the years, as well as those who are just beginning to make their mark in the Art World.

Discover diverse art at Phonebooks In The Attic.

©Dan Morgan - Bedroom Window Moores, 2018

Featured Artists

  • Dan Morgan

    Dan Morgan (@DanMorganFfoto) is a Photographic Artist and the Founder of Phonebooks in the Attic Gallery, based in Swansea, Wales.

    Dan’s work surrounds the ideology of the uncanny and unreal, taking seemingly everyday images, and blurring the lines of reality through surrealism and manipulation. His working themes surround the idea of falsified truths and the theory behind anti-conformity, going against society and not dwelling on social constructs and propaganda.

  • Dorothy Chan

    Dorothy Chan (@doryeek) was born and raised in Hong Kong, and now based in Swansea, South Wales. Dorothy lives under a combination of both eastern and western influences, significantly, the last few years in the Scandinavian design sector after her undergraduate studies in marketing.

    Dorothy believes that "One will never fully understand how things actually work until you give it a try." The more she wrote about craftsmanship of furniture, interior and architecture designs, The more she discovered that it needed to be fully and practically explored.

  • William (Drew) Kelly

    Drew Kelly (@townscrier) is a Houston Firefighter, living in Montgomery, Texas with his wife and two children.

    Drew is drawn to shooting mundane oddities in small towns, with Texas being such a huge state, filled with these hidden gems. Drew has always been infatuated with small town living. “Growing up in a small town in Ohio, it’s a vibe I just can’t get away from.”

  • Lauren Pitson

    Lauren Pitson is a multi-disciplinary artist based in South Wales.

    Her practice and research are predominantly influenced by thoughts surrounding impermanence, ecology and the form. Lauren’s work combines alternative processes of collecting, deconstructing and reprocessing materials in order to document and explore these connections.

  • Paula Tollett

    Paula Tollett is a Photographic Artist based in Brighton, UK.

    Paula’s practice is informed by the study of the landscape and its association with time and memory. Her work begins autobiographically, exploring family narratives, identity and intimacy. Through the use of photography, Paula aims to understand the relationship between place attachment and the landscape.

  • Gerard Kirwin

    Gerard Kirwin is a Seattle based photographer, who for the last two years has been focused on liminal spaces and low light within his work.

    Gerard’s future photography is set to be bigger, bolder, more cinematic, and more ambitious. “Photography has given me so much as an outlet to try and show the world the way I see it and that vision is changing as I change.”

  • Jack Moyse

    Jack Moyse is a photographer and artist from Swansea in South Wales. Who has been making images for roughly ten years having been gifted a camera by his dad father following an operation aged 18.

    “I think he thought it'd get me out of moping around the house after what'd been a pretty shitty few years. Camera in hand, I slowly started reintegrating into communities I'd become distant from, living vicariously through the lens.”

  • Jasmine Powell

    Jasmine Powell is a photographer based in Kansas City, Missouri. Photography has always been an interest of Jasmine's starting from a young age, but she began taking her Photographic practice seriously 5 years ago.

    Along her journey, she has worked shooting portraits, weddings, product photography, and more. However, her love for street photography came to light in 2021. Since then, Jasmine's photography has focused on the midwestern features found in the Northland and throughout Downtown Kansas City.

  • Emma Spreadborough

    Emma Spreadborough is an Irish artist who works predominantly in the photographic media. Her art practice is widely influenced by Irish literature, culture, and folklore.

    In her most recent work, 'You Mustn’t Go Looking', Spreadborough has been inspired by the writing of Brian Friel in Dancing at Lughnasa. She uses the analogies of his writing to explore the ideas of the Irish home and landscape in the wake of recent Northern Irish history.

  • Douglas Hall

    Douglas Hall is a film photographer based in Seattle, Washington. Photography has played a big part in Douglas' life, expanding from shooting weddings and events on digital for years only to be burnt out and found himself rediscovering his love for photography through the whole process of shooting and post processing film.

    Doug is a huge advocate for getting others to experience creating artwork using film, teaching others to slow down and enjoy the process of freezing time with film is something he strives to accomplish through publishing his work.

  • Izzy Coombs

    Izzy Coombs is an illustrator from a little Welsh village nestled away in the Swansea Valley countryside. She is currently in the midst of completing her Bachelor of Arts in Illustration at UWTSD. Izzy’s work draws inspiration from nature and animals, with humorous and surrealist undertones she enjoys personifying animal characters and developing bizarre narratives.

In Loving Memory of Adrian John Morgan

Adrian John Morgan (B. 1963) was Born in Neath, West Glamorgan, to Gareth and Patricia Morgan. Gareth was the Art Teacher at the Comprehensive School that Adrian and his brother Carl attended. At University, Adrian studied History and Politics, but his passion for photography thrived when inter-railing through Europe in the early 1980's at the age of 19.  Where many of these archive images come from. There are very few photographs of Adrian as he was always behind the lens, Adrian found a joy behind the camera that he wished to share with others, offering Wedding Photography Services to friends and family through the 90's and early 00's. 

In 2005, My father Adrian John Morgan passed away to cancer. 

17 years later, his work is being shown for the first time, before now only myself and my father have seen some of these images. 


Please enjoy them, as I have enjoyed discovering them.

Adrians Archives