ANTROPOCEN (2023 — ongoing project)
The Anthropocene reveals itself not only in data and discourse, but in the subtle fractures of our daily existence. This project seeks to illuminate the fragile bond between body and environment, a relationship increasingly strained by the accelerated rhythms of urban life and technological dominance.
The landscapes depicted are not untouched wilderness, but sites of extraction—mines, quarries, and other terrains irreversibly reshaped by human industry. What seems natural is already marked, bearing scars of exploitation and loss.
Within these altered spaces, the body becomes both witness and participant, carrying traces of ecological rupture while longing for reconnection. Nudity here is not provocation, but a return to elemental presence: a gesture toward coexistence rather than control.
The images ask how, in an era of irreversible change, we might still cultivate intimacy with the more-than-human world, and imagine forms of harmony yet to come.