Kenya's Thandiwe Muriu: Standing out in camouflage.
Photographer Thandiwe Muriu wants her models to both blend in and stand out at the same time.
The images in her Camo - short for camouflage - series create an optical illusion where the person in the photograph almost disappears yet it is impossible to ignore her.
The young Kenyan's playful work has the feel of a glossy high-fashion magazine but also has a deeper meaning.
"I love fashion photography, I could do that all day, but I realised it needs to be fashion photography that is a reflection of who I am and my background," she tells the BBC. "That is how the Camo series came about."
The funky fabrics, elaborate hairstyles and improvised eyewear are an attractive and witty celebration of the 30-year-old's culture.
But there is also a critique.
Muriu says the series is "a little bit of a personal reflection on how I felt I can disappear into the background of my culture.
"And my experience as a commercial female photographer was realising that very quickly - because of the cultural context - I can be dismissed and disappear."
She was self-taught, schooled, in her words, at "the university of YouTube", but her father provided the initial impetus.
Raising a family of four daughters and no sons he was keen to buck the patriarchal assumptions, Muriu says.
He taught them practical skills like how to change the tyre on a car, how to barbecue and, most significantly, how to use a camera.
And when it came to choosing a career she was encouraged to follow her passion for photography. For her it was the "perfect blend of science and art".