My Perspective

My approach to photography is contemplative, poetic, and at times, philosophical.
To me, art is the act of truly seeing what everyone has seen—yet never stopped to truly look at.

Through my lens, I do not seek spectacle or grand subjects, but rather meaning in the overlooked.
These weathered, broken tree trunks—with their scars, textures, and ancient lines—are, to me, storytellers of life: silent narratives of endurance, erosion, and the passage of time.

In these images, the rough surfaces of nature resemble forgotten faces, silent cries, or raised hands—echoes of pain, beauty, and memory etched into wood.
What may appear as lifeless forms are, in fact, remnants of a presence that still lingers, quietly, in the shadows.

Photography, for me, is a way of uncovering these silences—a way of listening to what cannot be seen at first glance.