Nullshima Studio is a creative production studio based in the Netherlands, led by interdisciplinary artists Anne Fehres and Luke Conroy. Working at the intersection of immersive art and contemporary audiovisual storytelling, the studio creates experimental installations that invite critical reflection on today’s most urgent cultural and ecological issues.

Specializing in multimedia experiences - ranging from large-scale video installations to interactive digital works - Nullshima Studio explores themes such as cultural heritage, identity, climate change, artificial intelligence, digital culture, and decolonization. Through a signature collage-based methodology that blends photography, sound design, performance, research, and spatial installation, their projects blur the lines between the physical and virtual.

Anne brings a background in documentary filmmaking and audiovisual design from the Royal Academy of Fine Arts (KASK) in Ghent, while Luke contributes expertise in sociology, visual arts, and education from the University of Tasmania. As a small and hands-on team, Nullshima Studio is involved in every stage of production, from concept development and scripting to animation, filming, sound design, and installation. While the studio brings a wide range of skills in-house, collaboration remains central to their approach, often working closely with curators, sound designers, performers, technologists, and researchers to expand the scope and depth of each project.

Nullshima Studio’s projects have been supported by institutions such as Creative Europe, the European Cultural Foundation, Mondriaan Fonds, Creative Industries Fund NL, the Netherlands Film Fund, Goethe-Institut, Consulate General of the Netherlands, the Italian Ministry of Culture, Arts Council Malta, and Eye Film Museum. Their work has been exhibited internationally, including solo shows at Hošek Contemporary (Germany), Concordia (Netherlands), and Pier-2 Art Center (Taiwan), and featured at leading festivals and institutions like International Film Festival Rotterdam, Into The Great Wide Open, Thessaloniki Documentary Film Festival, LINZ FMR, Viborg Kunsthal, DMZ Docs, and the Hong-gah Museum.