For me, intimacy is both political and emotional, shaped by power, visibility, and autonomy. My work begins with portraits that honor everyday intimacy—care, vulnerability, and presence—set within domestic interiors where ordinary gestures reveal fluid, relational identities.

Photography becomes a shared, performative process rather than an act of control. I photograph participants and they photograph me, using an Instax camera. With more than 60 participants so far, these reciprocal images create a space of mutual authorship and shared visibility.

Through this lens, the project gently questions how we present ourselves, how we are perceived, and what remains unsaid. It does not seek confrontation, but revelation—making room for nuance, openness, and the complexity of being seen. Ultimately, the work is about creating a space where connection can unfold quietly, where photography becomes an act of trust. 


Here, this is presented as a small selection of images; a book is planned.

Political is personal