Romain Berger: Staging Desire Between Cinema and Fiction

In the visual universe of Romain Berger, every image feels like a scene paused mid-story. Photographer, scenographer, filmmaker, and art director, Berger constructs worlds where cinema and photography collide, creating images that function as suspended narratives rather than simple portraits.

Atmosphere is everything. Color, lighting, and composition are meticulously orchestrated to build emotionally charged environments where each frame feels deliberate and theatrical. Berger’s practice exists at the intersection of staging and fiction, transforming photography into a space where storytelling unfolds without words.

At the center of his visual language is the male body. Rather than serving as a manifesto, it becomes a recurring symbol within Berger’s carefully constructed scenes. Through this approach, he examines cultural codes, familiar clichés, and contemporary archetypes, presenting masculinity as something performative, stylized, and open to interpretation.

While his work often resonates with queer visual culture, Berger avoids framing it as an overtly militant statement. Instead, the imagery naturally reflects the worlds and identities that shape his personal experience. The result is a body of work that feels both intimate and universal—images that invite viewers to enter a space where conventions are quietly challenged and emotions remain just beneath the surface.

Each photograph stands as its own autonomous fiction. Berger’s cinematic eye is deeply informed by filmmakers and visual artists whose work reshaped the aesthetics of desire and identity. Among his influences are directors such as Rainer Werner Fassbinder, Wong Kar-wai, and Gregg Araki—as well as iconic image-makers like David LaChapelle, Robert Mapplethorpe, and Tom of Finland.

In 2022, Berger published his first photographic book, Life’s a Cabaret, with Men On Paper Art—a retrospective gathering three years of creative work. He also contributed to Sex Utopia, a collective publication featuring major artists including Pierre et Gilles and Bruce LaBruce.

Over the past seven years, Berger’s work has been exhibited internationally in galleries and featured in magazines worldwide, steadily establishing a distinctive voice within contemporary image-making. His practice blurs the boundaries between cinema, fashion, and art photography—creating visual fictions that linger long after the viewer looks away.

For Berger, the photograph is never just an image. It is a moment suspended between fantasy and reality, where narrative, desire, and aesthetic precision come together to form a world entirely of his own.

JW Anderson x Tom of Finland: The Capsule Collection

JW Anderson pays homage to Tom of Finland with a three-piece capsule collection celebrating the artist’s legacy.

Jonathan Anderson noted: “I collect many types of art, but drawings have always been a passion. And as a gay man and a designer, Tom of Finland has always fascinated me. To take his drawings and use them in my designs is a bit of a dream come true.”

The collection consists of a keyring, a visor and a tote bag, all available HERE

House of Illustration will open the UK’s first public solo show dedicated to artist Tom of Finland

This year House of Illustration will open the UK’s first public solo show dedicated to gay cultural icon and prolific artist Tom of Finland (born Touko Laaksonen), in partnership with Tom of Finland Foundation and the Finnish Institute in London.

This timely exhibition, on the centenary of his birth, will celebrate the artist whose homoerotic visions had a profound effect on gay communities in Europe and North America during a pivotal period in their history and continue to have an immeasurable influence on popular culture today. Tom of Finland: Love and Liberation will display 40 works on paper produced from the 1960s to the 1980s, both before and after homosexuality was decriminalised in much of Europe and the U.S.

It will include early drawings of men fighting that constituted the only legal way to show physical contact between men before decriminalisation, as well as illustrations from his iconic Kake comics and rare linocuts produced in very limited editions.

The exhibitiion wil be on from the 6th of March until late June.

Book your ticket online