Photography was invented to capture human experience. Mine are rooted in the city.

Across my practice, I am interested in what endures and what disappears—what is built to last, and what exists only briefly. My photographs are an effort to slow down and acknowledge these moments, offering a quiet record of the city as it is lived every day.

My photography is a way of honoring the life that we live as urban folk. I want to be able to share the feeling of awe and reverence that are hidden within even some of the most mundane experiences we have, such as taking the subway or walking downtown.

Rather than focusing on landmarks or spectacles, I am drawn to quieter structures and systems that operate continuously in the background of daily life. These environments shape how people move, wait, and exist together, even when they are not consciously observed.

My analog process allows me to remain present with each image. The physical process of loading film, exposing negatives, and printing photographs informs how the work is made and experienced.

Each print becomes a deliberate object, shaped by time, attention, and restraint. In a day and age where everything is at our fingertips, it feels even more important to immerse myself in creating something with my hands, entirely from my imagination, with my hands, and my heart.