Form and Nature is a monochrome photographic series that reflects on the relationship between the
human body and the natural world.
It draws on the past – when humanity livid connected with
nature, relying on it for survival and belonging where everything was fluid, connected, one.
In-between space, where subtle echoes of that unity that exists. The connection of branches mirroring a
hand, the texture of bark resembling skin. These visual parallels speak of a recognition, a shared
language that persists even if we do not look for these similarities.
In the present, where this connection grows fragile. As the world accelerates – fast, artificial – we
drift further and further from the natural patterns that once grounded us.
Using black and white photography as a reflective timeless medium, this work captures emotional visual dialogue between
form and nature. The absence of faces throughout the series is intentional. When removing the
identity, the figures become universal, an invitation for a deeper connection, to the shared existence
between human form and the natural world.
A reminder of what we once were, a call to notice, to remember and perhaps return to that deep
connection we once held.