Ammar Yassir
I will never find home

juni 25, 2026by Rahiem Shadad

Now in its 17th edition, the biannual Foam Talent Programme continues to make waves by introducing a new selection of outstanding image-makers from across the globe. At a time heavily marked by political uncertainty, economic precarity and families forced into separation, this year’s 15 Foam Talents look closely at the roots holding everything together. Each in their own way, they invite us to reflect on the domestic, mundane, and personal as something universal by asking: What defines home?

‘I wanted to place myself as the subject of my photographs, so I started focussing on self-portraiture, manipulating the photos and writing on them.’ - says 21-years-old photographer, Ammar Yassir.  

The adversity of these contemporary times of global conflict and the urgency for depolarisation, creates an immense need for the personalisation of history. Artists on one hand, may express this method of narration unconsciously through the inherently introspective nature of art-making, while for us as witnesses, spending time with artworks allows us to experience relatedness away from the algorithmic and sometimes sponsored perspectives which dominate our news feeds. 

Self-hood in image-making or projection of the self through planting abstracted manipulations can express a form of self-keeping and autobiographical trace of the experience of the image-maker. The collaborative nature of documentary photography where the photographer must work with an external subject with minimal influence on the content the image can carry, draws an urge to think beyond the camera and reuse technology as a method to introduce the self. 

The series I will never find home by the Sudanese photographer Ammar Yassir, is a collection of digitally double exposed black and white photographs. The photographs contain a number of melancholic portraits that produce an intense sense of loss and confusion. The subjects of Yassir’s photographs range from family members to strangers he met along the way as he moved through four cities and towns, across Mid-East and West Sudan, escaping the escalation of conflict. 

All images from the series I will never find home © Ammar Yassir

This is an excerpt of the portfolio text published in Foam Magazine #68 Talent 2026. To read the full text order the physical copy.

About the artist

AMMAR YASSIR is a Sudanese documentary photographer and filmmaker currently based in Uganda. He specialises in documenting stories related to the ongoing conflict in Sudan. Yassir was commended as the youngest Ian Parry Grant of Photojournalism grantee, and his work has been published by the UNDP in Sudan, among others.  

About the author

ABDELRAHIEM IBRAHIM, also known as Rahiem Shadad, is a Sudanese curator and researcher. He was previously the director of Downtown Gallery in Khartoum until 2023, where he moved to Nairobi and directed the Rest Residency for Sudanese artists displaced by the conflict in Sudan. Rahiem's curatorial practice is rooted in studying the influence of movement and migration on artists and art movements. His exhibitions focus on drawing parallelism and contrasts between the different experiences of generations of artists in Sudan and the wider region from modern to contemporary. In 2026, Rahiem joined the Art Jameel organization as a curator for Hayy Jameel in Jeddah.  

Never miss a story - subscribe to Foam Magazine’s newsletter today.

emailAddress

Image caption: All images from the series I Will Never Find Home © Ammar Yassir


Ammar Yassir - I will never find home The series I will never find home by the Sudanese photographer Ammar Yassir, is a collection of digi [...]
3 min

explore connections

Foam Talent: Ammar Yassir