A Glasgow-based filmmaker has been included in an exhibition by artists shortlisted for this year's Turner Prize.
Visual artist Charlotte Prodger was among four nominees whose work was unveiled at London's Tate Britain on Monday.
The 44-year-old was nominated for two short films, one of which was titled BRIDGET and shot entirely on an iPhone in the Scottish countryside.
At the time judges praised Prodger, who studied at Glasgow School of Art, for "the nuanced way in which she deals with identity politics, particularly from a queer perspective."
Read more: Turner Prize short listed artist Charlotte Prodger to represent Scotland in Venice
Shortlisted alongside Forensic Architecture, Naeem Mohaiemen and Luke Willis Thompson, this year's prize is dominated by art works which reflect a turbulent and contested political and social climate.
Forensic Architecture is an international research agency that uses video, photographs, scale models and text to investigate allegations of state and corporate violence.
Thompson has created portraits of people affected by racial and social inequality through silent black and white 16mm and 35mm films, including Diamond Reynolds, who broadcast the aftermath of the shooting of her boyfriend by a police officer during a traffic stop.
Read more: Glasgow artist in running for the 2018 Turner Prize
Mohaiemen's installation comprises a three-channel video called Two Meetings and a Funeral. It analyses leftist political movements in the third world through an exploration of transnational architecture in Algeria and Bangladesh.
Director of Tate Britain Alex Farquharson said: "The artists shortlisted for this year's Turner Prize are tackling some of today's most important issues, from queer identity, human-rights abuses and police brutality to post-colonial migration and the legacy of liberation movements.
"For the first time, all the shortlisted artists work with the moving image and it's thrilling to see how wide a range of techniques and styles they use."
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