top of page

A portrait rarely happens when the camera is raised. It happens after once the pose has been tried, abandoned, and something quieter takes its place. I wait for that moment rather than direct it: a shift in breathing, a glance that forgets it's being watched. Light matters, but attention matters more. The work is not to arrange a face but to notice when it stops arranging itself. Most of what I do is stand still and pay attention.

bottom of page