Digital Abstraction

My digital work explores moments when ordinary vantage points, including windows, skylights, and in-between architectural spaces, begin to feel like thresholds rather than frames. Using layered photography and digital compositing, I combine aerial views, rain-blurred surfaces, and fragments of built environments to soften distinctions between interior and exterior, ground and sky, nearness and distance.

Across this body of work, light, atmosphere, and accumulation become tools for disrupting clarity. Raindrops on glass, fog, and overlapping exposures reshape how landscape is perceived, inviting slower looking and a heightened awareness of mediation, including how weather, architecture, and technology may influence what we believe we are seeing.

Rather than documenting specific locations, these images focus on perceptual space: suspended, shifting, and slightly disorienting. Together, the works ask how place is constructed through layers of experience, and how moments of visual uncertainty can open new ways of noticing presence, scale, and belonging.