Photography has always captivated me—not just the image, but the emotion it brings to life. I first picked up a camera in my mid-20s, experimenting casually until my late 30s when the art truly took hold.

In 2019, I started collaborating with Shatterbox Theatre, which nurtured my drive to capture storytelling images, or what Cartier-Bresson called "the decisive moment." I now shoot mainly on film, favoring old camera equipment and older film stock for their grain, lens flare, and the unpredictable beauty of development—a counterbalance to today’s instant digital world that gives each frame more depth for me.

I began with documentary and street photography but now drift somewhere between art and realism. My work is steeped in contrast, hard shadows, and negative space, often evoking a sense of isolation or raw emotion.

Influences like Anton Corbijn, Daido Moriyama, and Trent Parke have shaped my approach. My goal is simple: to create images that speak for themselves, conveying a mood or story that lets viewers feel what I felt in the moment.