Gregg Robinson is an award-winning Zimbabwean photographer and printmaker whose work is defined by its quiet strength and deep connection to the African wilderness. His photographs have featured in international publications and have been exhibited at the Royal Geographical Society in London, reflecting a career shaped by both artistic sensitivity and field experience.
Rooted in patience and craft, Gregg’s practice follows an old-world approach to image-making—favouring time, observation, and restraint over immediacy. His imagery captures the subtle rhythms of the natural world, where light, movement, and landscape converge, creating a body of work that feels both timeless and deeply present.
At its core, his work seeks to create an emotional connection between people and the wilderness. Each photograph acts as a window into the wild—inviting the viewer to step beyond the frame and into environments that are at once distant and intimately familiar.
His prints are created to be lived with. Crafted with careful attention to material and process, they bring a sense of stillness, scale, and quiet presence into interior spaces. In this way, each piece becomes more than an image—it becomes a bridge between wild places and the rhythms of contemporary life, offering moments of calm, reflection, and reconnection.
Alongside his photographic work, Gregg is an accomplished author and a dedicated advocate for alternative printing processes, including cyanotype and other historic techniques. Working from his studio and darkroom, he continues to explore the tactile and expressive qualities of printmaking, producing works that endure—both visually and emotionally.
“Knowing that each piece will find a home is a quiet privilege—each print holding time, inviting you to pause and drift into its world.”
The Elephants and Albidas Collection is my tribute to the gentle giants of the Zambezi Valley. Innocently moving
with quiet purpose along ancestral paths, unchanged for centuries, beneath the magnificent canopy of the
albida forest in Mana Pools National Park.