Ramelle Williams & Fenton Fleming
Ramelle Williams
My dance journey began in 2008 with Angels Dance Academy, where our team claimed second place at the ISAF Worlds—a moment that solidified my love for performance. During my time there, I also discovered my passion for teaching, leading dance classes and inspiring others to move.
After relocating to London, I found myself thriving in the competitive scene, winning battles like Breaking the Bay, World of Dance, What You Got, and Go Hard or Go Home. Each victory pushed me to refine my craft and deepen my connection to the art of dance.
My journey then brought me to Jukebox Collective, where I expanded my skills as a performer, teacher, and choreographer. I performed in productions like Casablanca, choreographed my own original show, and developed innovative teaching methods to share my knowledge with the next generation of dancers.
Beyond the stage, my work has been featured in Virgin advertisements and the YouTube Ritual series, showcasing my versatility as a performer. I’ve also graced some of the UK’s biggest stages, including Glastonbury, Boomtown, and Love Festival, bringing my energy and passion to live audiences.
Dance isn’t just what I do—it’s who I am. From competitive battles to transformative performances, I’m constantly pushing boundaries, inspiring others, and evolving as an artist.
Fenton Fleming
I am a photographer and visual artist from Bristol. My collaborative work is rooted in vibrant and playful imagery in music, fashion, and dance, while my personal practice stretches more broadly in context, often with a more surreal and solemn tone. Across both, the subjects in my photography can be seen to inhabit a quiet beauty within exaggerated and distorted realities.
I aim to show the charm and intrigue I find in my subjects, while placing them in the larger realm of my interior worldview. One shaped by a wide range of experiences and influences — from dance styles like popping, krump, and breaking, to wider Hip Hop culture, music, design, architecture, and visual art. I’m particularly interested in ideas like afro-surrealism and the social production of space, which inform how I think about bodies, environments, and the atmospheres they generate.