Behind the collection: Building an Impossible Desert
There is something about deserts that feels already imagined.
Even when they are real, they often seem constructed—shaped more by memory and emotion than geography alone. Light flattens distance. Shadows stretch until time feels suspended. The landscape becomes less about place and more about atmosphere.
This collection began with that feeling.
Not a specific desert, but the idea of one.
A space defined not by sand or horizon, but by silence. By openness. By a sense of scale that removes the familiar reference points of everyday life.



Each image in the series was built around a simple idea: space as experience.
Some scenes emphasize vastness, where scale becomes the central feeling. Others focus on proximity, where small shifts in light or surface create intimacy within an open landscape. Together, they form a range of interpretations rather than a single location.
There are no narrative events in these deserts. The emphasis is on presence—on how space feels when it is stripped of distraction.

