The Spaces We Inhabit

Across the series (Dis)Connected, Once We Were Here, Rest Areas of the US Southwest, and Passages, my work explores the contemporary landscape as a site of both transition and projection. These images move away from the idea of landscape as a fixed or descriptive genre and instead approach it as something shaped by movement, memory, and systems of use.

I am drawn to places that sit slightly outside of attention: edges of cities, infrastructural corridors, rest stops, and transitional environments that are designed for passage rather than permanence. These are spaces we move through without fully registering, yet they carry layered histories of occupation, displacement, and transformation.

Taken together, these series reflect an ongoing inquiry into how we relate to place in a contemporary context. The landscape is not presented as stable or singular, but as something continually shaped by movement, infrastructure, and perception. It is a space we inhabit, pass through, and project onto.