An afternoon in the Netherlands: a five-frame conversation between a body, the grass, the light and its own shadow. This isn't a shoot story — it's an argument about form.
A pose is the expression a body gives the camera; form is the sentence a body builds with space. The pose looks at the photographer, form looks at the world. The frames in this series don't pose — they build geometry with the ground, the grass, a patch of light. The moment the viewer's eye gives up looking for a face, it starts seeing the line.
Art is making someone ask "what is this?" before they say "how beautiful".
Learning to see form changes how you look at life: people stop being expressions and become stances. In a waiting room, on a ferry deck, you begin to see compositions instead of stories. Whether that's an occupational deformity or a gift, I'm not sure. But I know this: the frame is one of the most graceful ways of making the world bearable.

Tell us about your project — we'll reply within 24 hours.
Get in Touch