Online Exhibition
EXPERIENCE A WORLD UNSEEN
The World Unseen online exhibition enables people with sight loss to better engage with the visual world, while challenging sighted people to see imagery through their lens. In partnership with the RNIB.
Online Exhibition
The World Unseen online exhibition enables people with sight loss to better engage with the visual world, while challenging sighted people to see imagery through their lens. In partnership with the RNIB.
The exhibition you don't need to see' attracted hundreds of blind, partially sighted, and sighted visitors over its three-day showcase. Discover how a World Unseen became a reality in an iconic London venue.
Read more Whether you're visually impaired, partially sighted, or sighted, explore our collection of images from a different perspective.
The inter-species bond between a beluga whale and the former whaler who saved him.
A photographer’s journey to the coldest inhabited place on earth, which is ravaged by wildfires.
South African photojournalist Brent Stirton’s heart-breaking image of the last male northern white rhino.
The incredible moment coral reproduces under water, from a laboratory in Sevenoaks, Kent.
A world-renowned photographer's unique snapshot into life in the Amazon.
Ulla Lohmann documents a young boy's indifference to an erupting volcano in Matupit, Papua New Guinea.
This is crazy, I never thought I’d have photos ever again.”
Muhammed Muheisen’s bittersweet image of children playing in their refugee settlement.
A visually impaired mother experiences her baby scan, thanks to Canon and a world-renowned ultrasound practitioner.
Marc Aspland captures the precise moment Chloe Kelly changed the game forever.
Samo Vidic’s dynamic portrait of Paralympic swimmer Darko Đurić.
When I was told I was losing my sight, I felt the need to see and do as much as possible. And I was determined to pursue my dream of becoming a photographer.”
Heidi Rondak's AI-generated image envisions the world of tomorrow.
Humberto Tan's study of the hands of 100-year-old man Henrikus Davenschot Augustus.
Blind photographer Ian Treherne’s arresting black-and-white portrait.
A powerful study of female body image and the scars we wear by Yagazie Emezi.
The Royal National Institute of Blind People (RNIB) and Canon have collaborated to create World Unseen, an initiative that aims to change the way we all experience imagery.
To make the World Unseen exhibition experience possible, we printed braille and relief versions of imagery using Canon PRISMAelevate XL software and Arizona printer series.
Find out more