SEE. love. collect.
Voyager Collection (2022)
10 prints of each edition available
£ / print
In the increasingly sterile landscape of 2026, where even our creative outputs are often optimised into blandness by the cold hand of the algorithm, Disco Bob represents a necessary act of productive defiance. He operates on the fringe of a revolutionary idea: that to find the most profound truths about our place in the universe, one must first abandon the tyranny of logic in favor of the groove.
His work is a masterclass in psychological arbitrage, taking the soul-stirring rhythms of 1970s Motown and the neon chaos of 80s nightlife and reframing them against the terrifying, silent vastness of deep space.
This perspective was inherited. Raised in a household where his father’s 80s nightclub residencies served as an apprenticeship in the art of atmosphere, Bob learned early that context is everything. A single disco ball in a vacuum is a device that shatters light into fractals, mirroring the Big Bang, but with significantly better tailoring.
Bob's trajectory — moving from the sun-drenched, high-pressure promotion booths of 90s Ibiza to the global festival stage — serves as a costly signal of authenticity. He has lived the "discombobulation" of modern existence and emerged with a visual language that translates the visceral energy of the dancefloor into a map for the cosmos.
"The universe is a vast, terrifying void, but luckily it’s also a giant glitter ball. My work is simply the act of reframing the silence of space into the rhythm of the moment. We are all lost, but if the beat is right, being lost is just another word for being free."
As a visual artist and touring DJ, Bob lives in a state of deliberate displacement. He is the ultimate "rogue bee," deviating from the hive mind to find new sources of nectar in the unknown. His art seeks to solve the problems of reality, to reframe them as opportunities for perception.
This collection is an invitation to participate in a cosmic dance. Voyager is a reminder that while we are all technically floating in a void, the music hasn't stopped — it's simply changed frequency.













