About

Frazer Colaço is a photographer born in Goa, India, and now living in London, UK. His life stretches between geographies—between coastlines and cities, roots and wanderings. That constant crossing of borders has shaped how he sees the world, and how he frames it.

He calls his way of seeing the Frontier: the fragile threshold where dreams and reality blur into each other. Frazer’s photographs move within this space, where something as simple as a mountain, a face, or a wave can hold both the weight of reality and the shimmer of a dream.

Nature, especially, is where he feels most at home. Landscapes, skies, rivers, forests—these are not just backdrops in his images, but living presences. He photographs them not as scenery, but as characters with their own moods, their own quiet voices. The human and the natural are never separate in his work—they breathe into each other, sometimes harmoniously, sometimes with tension, but always inseparably.

Frazer often says, “Capturing it is a dream, showing it is a reality.” To him, taking a photograph is like entering a trance: a private act of vision, of surrendering to what he feels in the moment. But once an image is revealed, it no longer belongs only to him—it enters a shared space, where others bring their own dreams and memories to meet it.

His work circles around themes of intimacy, displacement, and belonging. He is drawn to landscapes not only for their beauty, but for the way they mirror our inner terrains—wild, uncertain, fragile, ever-changing. A portrait, for him, is not separate from a horizon; both are explorations of identity, silence, and presence.

Frazer’s photographs are less about answers than invitations. They ask us to step closer, to stand still, to listen. They remind us that reality is never fixed, that we live always at the frontier—where the earth beneath our feet and the dreams within us flow together.

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