A concrete bridge curves to the right, its path seamlessly extended by a slender branch stretching over a quiet creek in the forest. The transition between the two frames is subtle yet profound—one world flowing into another. "Aftermath" speaks of contrasts and connections. The built and the natural, the structured and the organic, the past and what follows. It’s about the traces we leave behind, the way roads end but journeys continue, and how nature always finds a way to weave itself back in.
A quiet yet curious moment—a boy standing still, gazing to the right, where he sees himself in motion, kicking a ball along a winding path through the forest or garden. One frame holds reflection, the other, movement. "Self Encounter" is about seeing oneself from a different perspective. It’s about past and future, thought and action, the quiet pause before stepping forward. In this fleeting moment, the boy meets himself—not just as he is, but as he’s becoming.
A simple story—a child reaching for a ripe blackberry, fingers just shy of their goal. In the first frame, there’s the stretch, the effort, the almost. In the second, the reward—a tiny hand finally grasping the fruit. "The Taste of Reaching" isn’t just about the berry’s sweetness. It’s about the joy of trying, the thrill of finally getting there, and the little victories that make childhood (and life) so special.
A snow-covered landmass emerges from the fog in the first frame, grounding the viewer in an uncertain but tangible place. Birds drift on the water, the faint sun barely piercing through the mist. In the second frame, the land has disappeared—only water, birds, and endless fog remain. What was once a fragile certainty has slipped away, leaving only vast openness. "Vanishing Point" is about the fine line between being lost and being free. The land in the first image offers reassurance, a reference point in the unknown. But once it fades, perspective shifts—are we adrift, or simply somewhere new? It’s a quiet meditation on uncertainty, solitude, and the ever-changing nature of the horizon.