In my personal practice, I tend to focus on nature and people.
My interactions with nature give me a distinct feeling of being immersed—engulfed in the multitude of reality and its layers of time. I’m fascinated by the quantum field and like to imagine infinite pasts, presents, and futures all happening at once. My favorite nature photos feel as if I’m touching several layers at once while being part of them.
When photographing people, it’s almost the opposite. My own existence and presence seem to disappear; I become a witness outside myself, capturing a split second that contains multitudes—anchored by objects, people, places, and stories, yet is distinctly its own among the finite.
Each single moment is unrepeatable and inherently different from every other iteration of itself. By contrast, nature is a series of overlapping voices, a being that is one. Nature knows no separation. We created that as humans, but we can’t really fault ourselves for doing so.




















