There are places that feel alive.
Places with character, where identity is not explained but simply felt — through light, materials, gestures, and the rhythm of everyday life.
Photography and film are, for me, two ways of observing the same thing: how a place reveals itself.
Places are remembered less for what they contain than for the way they make us feel.
Every place carries the imprint of the people who shape it, often in ways that remain almost invisible.
Character is rarely found in perfection. It lives in textures, routines, imperfections and the quiet rhythm of everyday life.
Light, gesture, texture and atmosphere are the elements I naturally return to, whether documenting an existing place or accompanying the creation of a new one.
On making images :
Over the years, I have found myself drawn to places with a strong sense of identity — where architecture, landscape, craftsmanship and everyday life come together naturally, creating something that feels both intentional and effortless. What interests me most is not documenting these places, but understanding what gives them their character, and how it can be translated into images.
Sometimes it is the quality of the light at a particular hour. Sometimes it is the way a craftsman repeats the same gesture every morning, or the relationship between a building and the landscape that surrounds it. Often, it is something almost impossible to name, yet immediately perceptible.
This is why film has become an integral part of my practice. Not as a separate discipline, but as a natural extension of photography. Some stories are better told in a single frame; others need movement, silence and time. Together, they allow a place to be experienced rather than simply observed.
I am drawn to collaborations with places that already have a clear sense of self — where image is not only a form of representation, but part of how a place defines itself over time. These experiences have shaped the way I approach photography and film as a continuous language, capable of holding a coherent vision while allowing each place to express its own sensibility.
I look to create images that feel inseparable from the places they belong to — images that reveal character, build memory, and quietly become part of a brand's story.