
Principles
I photograph the weight of a glance, the silence before the music begins, the way light chooses a moment and leaves the rest untouched.
Over years and across many paths, my camera has been an anchor — through weddings lifted into the sky, through portraits of authors and artists, through streets and stages where stories unfurl without warning. I have worked in celebrations, in stillness, in noise — moving through life’s many rooms without asking it to rearrange itself for the lens.
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My professional work has crossed portraiture, events, weddings, boudoir, music, food, and documentary spaces. But the heart of my practice is not built from categories. It is built from attention — from the decision to watch instead of direct, to wait instead of arrange.
In my personal work, I am drawn to the unguarded world: travel, faces, sound, stone, movement, quiet scenes that catch and hold a feeling long after the shutter falls.
Every photograph, for me, is a record of presence — of the life that moved, briefly, between the light and the shadow. My role is not to create it. Only to witness it, and keep it.









