My photographic practice emerged from an early fascination with analog photography during my high school years, evolving through street, travel, and nature photography into my current focus on documentary work. My artistic journey parallels a broader inquiry into the human condition—its subtleties, contradictions, and relational depth. I approach photography not simply as an art form but as a method of witnessing, one that invites presence, intimacy, and emotional realism.

Deeply influenced by my academic background in psychology and my work in maternal ecopsychology, my most reseat project explores the interconnection between inner landscapes and ecological realities. My aesthetic is grounded in candid, unconstructed moments—images that preserve the integrity of lived experience. Themes of memory, diversity, and place recur throughout my work, often serving as entry points for larger conversations around healing, identity, and reciprocity.