A series of diptychs pairing unedited photographs with their transformed counterparts.
This series began with a question that followed me after reading Paul Virilio’s words: “The invention of the ship was also the invention of the shipwreck.” Every photograph carries both revelation and loss—the moment I press the shutter, something ungraspable is already gone.
Each diptych pairs an image directly out of the camera with its transformed counterpart. The two are not opposites but echoes of the same moment: one recording what I saw, the other reflecting what I felt.
Over time, this process became a quiet dialogue within myself—a way of questioning what art means to me, and how to remain true to feeling amid too many ideas. I’ve come to understand that art is not about clarity, but about listening inward, allowing thought and emotion to find their balance.
Following a sense of natural unfolding, each image becomes what it needs to be. In that space between seeing and feeling, I begin to recognize my own voice.