Michael Green calls his exhibition of black-and-white photographs a record of “work and pleasure abroad and wanderings nearer to home”. Home for Green is Oxfordshire.

This, his first solo exhibition, comprises 60 photographs and is drawn from his work over the last seven-plus years. It contains images from Egypt, Morocco, Canada, continental Europe and England, including Oxford. His focus is on human beings, their self-absorption and their vulnerability, which he emphasises by portraying them within towering built environments or dominant landscapes.

The Oxford photographs include a man and boy, deep in conversation and seen from behind, as they sit on the bank of the Oxford Canal, framed and diminished by lush summer vegetation. There is also the tired looking head and shoulders of a chef — presumably on a cigarette break — also seen from behind, somewhere in the Castle complex where stone walls tower above him and the curve of a banister leads the eye down steps past him.

From farther afield is a patient official (see above) perched on his own small monument, on the outskirts of Cairo, solitary in contrast to the open stretches of desert, and seemingly ignorant of his missing companion and the potentially conspiratorial camels in the background.

Green uses black-and-white film and an SLR camera. He prints on to traditional fibre paper, exposing some areas to more light than others in order to accentuate particular details.

The exhibition is at Art Jericho and continues until November 28. The gallery is open Wednesday to Saturday 10am-5pm; Sunday 1-5pm.