Ewen graduated from the University of Brighton in 1997 and began shooting for visually driven style magazines, such as Sleazenation and The Face, with an emphasis on youth culture.
In 2000 he embarked upon a project called Teenagers documenting British adolescents as they were coming to terms with socializing, dating and sex. What separates him from other social documentarians is a sense that he knows and likes his subjects, that they trust him enough to allow him entry into their world, and that he has an understanding of what’s going on without being embedded in the scene himself.
In 2004 Teenagers was shortlisted for the Discovery Award at Rencontres D’Arles curated that year by Martin Parr who tipped Ewen as ‘one to watch’. The work was shown as part of the main festival alongside other nominees. His proposal to the judges at Arles that year was to create a body of work that would eventually be released as the book Open Mic. The work took 3 years to complete, exploring the burgeoning Grime music scene, which was based predominantly in East London. ‘Open Mic’ went on to collect a D&AD award for photographic publishing.
Ewen has continued his interest in youth culture. In 2013 he began self-publishing a biannual photo-zine called Guapamente focusing on global youth subcultures visiting Naples, Marseille, Miami and London. 2013 also saw the publication by Gost of UKG. The project focused on the early days of the UK Garage music scene. As Ewen has since observed; “Garage had all the attributions to any worthy UK subculture, clean living under difficult circumstances. Dressing up and living for the weekend.” UK Garage was exclusive at the time. Today it raises questions concerning style, music and an age when a multi-cultural, working class youth pre-dated social media and the internet. Mobile phones were a novelty but access to designer labels, expensive drinks and flights to Ayia Napa were on the menu.
Ewen’s success with book publishing and also a number of collaborations to create cover artwork for notable musicians including The Streets and The White Stripes has lead to significant commissions from advertising agencies applying his strong visual language to communicate with their clients specific brands. The past 10 years have seen noted outdoor and editorial print campaigns and also bespoke photo-books and zines plus films for Nike, Apple, Adidas and Smirnoff.
Following the publication of UKG, Dazed and Confused approached Ewen to direct a short documentary film exploring the UK Garage scene. The 8 minute short was picked up by Channel 4. Ewen was asked to turn the film into a 23 minute documentary for national television broadcast in March 2014, followed by a documentary about Grime, based on his Open Mic book, broadcast November 14.
After the success of these two short films Channel Four & i-D magazine commissioned Ewen to write, direct and narrate a four part documentary film series called “Street, Sound and Style” Broadcast in May 2015 the films chart the journey of youth style and music from 1980 through to today.