PHOTO SERIES:
WE WERE THERE, BUT NOBODY’S THERE.
This is a photo series about us and our surroundings. I have been attached to the question about people, the place they went to and the time they spend over there. Photography, by its nature, freezes the transient—a singular, vanishing point captured for eternity. How could photos, as a method of capturing certain moments, document a period of time and what happened during that time?
Nature itself is a ceaseless symphony of change, even as it presents the illusion of permanence. The human footprint is but a brief whisper in the grand dialogue between time and space.
“We were there, but nobody was there.”
By employing long exposure techniques, I aim to blur the lines between the temporal and the eternal, the transient and the immutable. Choosing dawn and dust as my main shooting time, those liminal hours when the world seems to hold its breath, caught between yesterday and tomorrow.