I’m a photographer inspired by the timeless vision of Ansel Adams, drawn to the raw beauty and quiet power of black-and-white landscapes. My work focuses on mood and atmosphere—capturing the solitude of mountain ridges, the weight of forests, and the way light transforms open spaces into something almost spiritual. Like Adams, I use the camera to chase depth, contrast, and detail, but always with the goal of making people feel something, not just see it. While landscapes are my main focus, I bring the same sensibility to urban scenes and portraits: honesty, impermanence, and the interplay of light and shadow. For me, photography is part meditation, part storytelling. Each frame is an invitation to slow down, notice the details, and connect—to land, to memory, or to a fleeting moment that might otherwise slip by.
Project Statement
This series explores the ways black and white photography reveals the quiet power of open spaces. Five images capture the raw drama of mountain ridges cut by light, and skies that shift between calm and storm. These natural spaces hold magic: vast, unyielding, yet always in geological motion. Set against them is a single man-made structure, a circle of concrete and light, its clear geometry framing the ocean. Together, these works explore the tension between permanence and impermanence, the natural and the constructed. Stripped of color, the images invite stillness: moments where space itself becomes the subject, and beauty is found in both stone and silence.
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