Benjamin Jossinet

is a second generation Canadian artist based in the west, he received his BFA from Emily Carr University of Art + Design (2025). Jossinet divides his time between creative practice and freelance commercial work.

His artistic practice moves in two interrelated directions: one is grounded in a close attentiveness to the person, while the other is driven by a search for human traces, subtle evidence that people have moved through the world, leaving impressions that persist beyond the moment of their presence.

Particularly drawn to the quiet residues of human activity: surfaces, objects, and places that carry the marks of use and time. He seeks evidence of humankind in the artifacts that remain.

Jossinet employs photography to attend closely to these fragments; through the camera, ordinary materials become sites of accumulated histories, places where exposure to human use has shaped them. A worn edge, a faded surface, or the gradual erosion of form can suggest a narrative without ever fully resolving it, allowing these sites of focus to operate as active participants in the intersection of lives that remain largely unseen and are often forgotten.

He is available for commissions worldwide.