Camille Farrah Lenain’s Made of Smokeless Fire weaves the personal and the political to explore the layered nature of LGBTQ+ identity as it unfolds in the shadow of dislocation, erasure, and marginalisation. Set in France, home to one of the largest Muslim populations in Europe, and marked by pervasive Islamophobia in which queer Muslim lives are often rendered invisible, Lenain counters erasure through a deeply attentive and relational photographic approach.
The work began as testimony and homage in the wake of the death of her uncle Farid who grew up gay in a Muslim Algerian family, opening outward from personal loss into a collective portrait of community. The individuals pictured navigate complex terrain, some distanced from family, others reinterpreting cultural inheritance, many forging networks of safety and affirmation, as they negotiate life within overlapping pressures of Islamophobia and queerphobia.
Gathering colour-heavy, dreamlike scenes that feel tender yet slightly dislocated, Lenain imbues her subjects in warm mediterranean light, revealing the layered nature of their identities. Grounded in trust rather than spectacle, the portraits flow between visibility and concealment, honouring lives lived in careful secrecy. Gestures and domestic fragments are drawn into a soft, cinematic register, attuned to touch, atmosphere and emotional proximity, where interior life takes precedence over explanation.
Made of Smokeless Fire unfolds as both memorial and act of repair, honouring lives that have remained unspoken or sidelined across generations – lush, radical and attentive all at the same time.
220 x 280 mm, 144 pages, 60 colour plates
Section-sewn OTA-bound softcover with reversed debossed flaps and multiple paper stocks
Text by Fatima Daas in English, French and Arabic
Edited by Sarah Chaplin Espenon with Camille Farrah Lenain
ISBN: 978-1-912719-76-1
Cover artwork by Anousha Payne
Designed by Loose Joints Studio