Born in 1998, Raskmey Kong is a Cambodian documentary filmmaker, journalist, and photographer driven by social change and gender equality. A graduate in International Studies from Pannasastra University of Cambodia, she has dedicated over a decade to volunteering.
For the past seven years, she has told meaningful stories through documentary films including Ramsa Heart, Lonely, Be the Change, My Voice Can Change the World, and My Journal. Through her images, everyday life becomes both testimony and inspiration.
A scholarship recipient at Studio Images - House of Photography, she believes storytelling can give voice to the unseen and spark action. She is guided by a simple conviction: as a woman, nothing is impossible.
Between Shell and Skin addresses healing through processes of natural transformation. By observing lobsters shedding their shells in order to grow—remaining soft and vulnerable until a new protection forms—I came to see in this act a metaphor for human reconstruction. Like them, we must sometimes leave behind pain, fear, and parts of our identities that have become obsolete in order to rebuild ourselves.
The project I wish to develop in Niort centers on vulnerability, renewal, the body in relation to nature, water, texture, light, and the slow temporality of transformation. Inspired by river ecosystems and fragile environments, it will combine documentary-poetic photography and video to capture moments of softness, exposure, and rebirth. Rather than presenting healing as a rapid or completed process, the work emphasizes slowness, fragility, and a form of quiet strength, creating a visual space where vulnerability becomes the starting point of renewal.