Anna Pihan

Framing the Fleeting
Australian photographer Anna Pihan captures the beauty of life in moments of stillness, sunlight and gentle movement. Splitting her time between Sydney and Europe, her work is shaped by a lifelong love of travel, a deep connection to place and a desire to slow down and observe. Anna’s images evoke a quiet sense of discovery – inviting the viewer to pause, daydream and step into the scene.
“I’m drawn to capturing moments that evoke curiosity and longing – images that suggest a story unfolding just beyond the frame.”
Her primary medium is film photography, a choice that reflects her intuitive and intentional process. With each frame, she leans into the slow pace and imperfections of analogue photography, allowing colour and light to guide the atmosphere of the image. Rich with feeling and memory, her compositions favour sun-faded hues and tactile textures, favouring sensation over spectacle.

A Practice Rooted in Travel and Ritual
Anna works from instinct, letting the tone of a place or a fragment of atmosphere shape what comes next. “Whether I’m photographing in a coastal village or a quiet corner of a hotel, I want the final work to feel immersive, as if the viewer is experiencing it firsthand.” Alongside her photographic work, she co-founded The Pleasure of Leisure, a lifestyle brand and book project that explores travel, rest and the creative life. Her practice expands beyond the frame – into books, guides and curated experiences that celebrate the art of slow living.
Wherever she is in the world, Anna’s camera is never far. Her workspace might be a ferry crossing the Tyrrhenian Sea or a train gliding through the arid landscapes of Northern Africa, but the perspective remains the same: observational, reflective and deeply sensory. Travel, vintage photography and mid-century design continue to shape her practice, while everyday rituals – bathing in the ocean, early morning light or a quiet page of a vintage book – offer a steady rhythm of inspiration.