About
Before I had a camera in my hand, I moved through places the way most people do — quickly, efficiently, on to the next thing. Now I can't pass through a doorway without noticing the light. I can't sit in a window seat without studying how the wing bisects the sky.
I make photographs because looking slowly is the only way I know to truly be somewhere. Not to document it, not to collect it, but to be present inside it, long enough for something quiet to reveal itself.
My work moves between landscape, street, and architecture, though the subject is always the same: the moment just before or just after the obvious one. The empty road. The shadow on the wall. The border that has become a landscape.
By day I work in technology, designing products used by millions. Photography is how I remember that the world is made of particular things, not general ones.