
SURREAL CITY
Surreal moments emerge when the familiar shifts – just slightly, but enough to unsettle the expected. In black-and-white, light and shadow loosen their attachment to reality: reflections behave like openings, scale slips out of proportion, and ordinary structures begin to feel ambiguous. What’s real remains visible, yet the relationship between things tilts, creating a quiet sense of uncertainty.
Precision is essential. Geometry provides order; a single deviation introduces tension. A misaligned shadow, a shifted rhythm, or an unexpected viewpoint creates the disturbance. The image stays minimal and controlled, but its meaning becomes porous – open to interpretation, open to doubt.
The goal isn’t fantasy, but perception: to let everyday scenes feel slightly off-beat, to reveal something overlooked, to offer a reading that isn’t literal. No spectacle, no excess – just subtle strangeness within clarity. These photographs balance restraint with friction, inviting the viewer to look again and complete the moment.





