[8] Seers found comfort behind the lens of the camera and used photography to recapture the immediacy of sensation that she enjoyed in the images of her eidetic memory.
[11][12] Seers' early fascination with photography led to a project of internalising the technology of the camera, in which she used her own body to produce photographs.
In the moment of capture she closed her lips or placed a hand over her mouth to make the exposure before returning into the sack to develop the image.
[14] The resultant images from this project appear framed by her teeth, stained with saliva and tinged red by the blood within her cheeks.
The Truth Was Always There: The Collection, Lincoln (Sep 2006 – Jan 2007); Smart Project Space, Amsterdam (2007); Thurgau, Ittengen, Switzerland (2010); Lofoten International Art Festival, Norway (2011).
Review: Paul Usherwood, Lindsay Seers: It has to be this way², Art Monthly, Issue 345, April 2011[18] Entangled 2: Turner Contemporary, Margate (2012); Matt's Gallery, London (2013) Review: Charmian Griffin, Time Out, 24 October 2013[19] Monocular: Lofoten International Art Festival (2011); Quad, Derby (2013); Galleri Festiviteten, Oslo (2012); Kunstverein, Freiburg (2012); Sami Art Centre, Karasjok, Norway (2014) Review: Robert Clark & Skye Sherwin, ‘The best exhibitions of 2013’ The Guardian, 21 December 2013[20] Extramission 6: Smart Project Space, Amsterdam (2007); Bonniers Kunsthalle, Stockholm (2012); Kiasma, Helsinki (2012); Tate Britain (2009); TPW Toronto (2011) Review: Jorg Heiser, Frieze magazine, April 2009[21] Nowhere Less Now: Artangel, Tin Tabernacle, London (2012) Review: Ben Luke, London Evening Standard, 20 September 2012[22] Review: Laura McLean-Ferris, The Independent, 4 September 2012[23] Nowhere Less Now 2: in 'The Red Queen' MONA (Tasmania, Australia) (2014)[24] Fleeting Exits: Sursock Museum, Beirut, Lebanon.
Sharjah Art Foundation (26 September - 26 December 2020)[29] Vam(pyre) Reality, Riga Art Space, Latvia (solo show) 13 April - 2 June 2024[30] Cold light FRAC Triennial 10 June - 14 January 2023 (France)[31] Double Knowledge, Alice Black Gallery 13 April - 13 May 2023[32] Hold onto (G)love.