I’ve spent more than twenty years behind the camera, exploring the intersection of light, honesty, and the human form. My work centers on male portraiture, created almost entirely with available light. For me, photography is about truth — not perfection or performance, but the presence that emerges when someone feels fully at ease.
I approach every session as a conversation rather than a production. I don’t direct much; I listen, observe, and let the light guide us. The goal isn’t to impose an image but to reveal one — the strength, softness, and individuality that already exist. Light and the human body each have their own rhythm, and I follow where they lead.
Over the years, I’ve learned that vulnerability can exist without judgment. That trust shows in the final images: portraits that are sensual without being exploitative, confident without being forced.
Outside my photography, I work as a statistician — a background that’s taught me to appreciate details, patterns, and balance. Numbers and art might seem like opposites, but for me, they share the same heartbeat: precision, curiosity, and the pursuit of truth.
When I’m developing a new idea or shaping a concept, or even have a photoshoot that I want to recreate,I often ask a dear friend to stand in. He knows my process, and those moments of experimentation frequently become some of my favorite work. There’s something special about creating with people who trust you enough to simply show up — no posing, no pretense, just presence.
Recently, I made the decision to separate my personal and photography Instagram accounts. It felt a bit like starting over — rebuilding an audience from the ground up, introducing myself again, and trusting that the work would speak for itself. But there’s also a freedom in that reset: a chance to curate a space that reflects who I am as an artist today, not just who I was years ago.
After two decades, my passion for photographing men hasn’t faded; it’s deepened. I’m still captivated by the way light moves across skin, the quiet narratives in expression, and the small human moments that transform into art. Every image is a reminder that beauty isn’t about appearance — it’s about how we exist in the light.
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