I discovered photography as a teenager. It wasn’t a revelation; it just happened. My parents gave me a camera, and from then on, it became a quiet constant in my life. I wasn’t particularly outgoing, and the camera gave me purpose and presence. It was a way to observe, to connect, and to create meaning from the ordinary.
I’m interested in people. Their layers, their contradictions, the silent moments in between. I try to build a temporary, intimate bond, one that allows me to document not just how someone looks, but how they feel, what they carry.
My work leans toward narrative and conceptual photography, part documentary, part interpretation. I’m drawn to the human form, the small gestures, the details that speak louder than words. I believe in photography as a way to share, to witness, and to make sense of what often goes unnoticed.
This is the space I want to stay in.