Sándor Nagy is a transdisciplinary artist born in Transylvania and currently based in Glasgow, Scotland. Working across fine art photography, performance art, nature art, and film, his practice explores ritual, ecology, and transformation through a deeply personal and intuitive lens. A graduate of the School of Art in Brașov, Romania, and West College Scotland, Nagy is now pursuing a BA (Hons) in Fine Art Photography at The Glasgow School of Art.
Drawing from lived experience, ancient traditions, and contemporary critical thought, Nagy's work weaves together land, body, and spirit. Whether through lens-based work, ephemeral installations, or action-based performance, his art engages with themes of belonging, memory, mortality, and cosmic interconnectedness. His pieces often fuse natural materials, mythic symbolism, and personal ritual, resulting in artworks that feel both grounded and otherworldly.
His practice has been featured in solo and group exhibitions across Europe and Asia, including the Royal Scottish Academy (SSA), Műcsarnok Budapest, and the Geumgang Nature Art Biennale in South Korea. He is a selected artist for the 2025 Scottish Landscape Awards show and is looking forward to his upcoming residency as an invited artist at the next edition of the Geumgang Nature Art Biennale with the Korea Nature Artists Association. Nagy’s work is held in public and private collections in North America, Europe, and Asia.
Alongside his artistic practice, he is a professional member of Creative Glasgow, the Scottish Artists Union, Scottish Contemporary Art Network (SCAN), Society of Scottish Artists (SSA), Visual Arts Scotland (VAS), Working Class Creatives Database (WCCD), and the Korean Nature Artists` Association (YATTO). His dedication to socially and ecologically engaged art continues to evolve through residencies, exhibitions, and community-rooted projects.