

Look at Me began with my relationship with photography on the verge of collapse. It is an attempt to save it: to return to my intuition, to set aside fixed conventions, and to present only what continues to enchant me.
In this series, I reveal my process of working with photography in a direct and honest way. Rather than concealing the medium’s flaws, I expose them deliberately, treating these imperfections as part of photography’s nature and using them to emphasize its beauty.
Look at Me is both a therapeutic method for rebuilding a relationship and a monologue of self-affirmation. It allows me and my chosen medium to re-examine and become fascinated by each other again. Since 2017, the project has continued as an ongoing act of self-reflection, one that may keep unfolding throughout my artistic practice.


















