About
I am a photographer working in narrative and memory, often through the lens of the Southern landscape. My work explores what is carried—through place, through history, and through the quiet, formative moments of childhood.
Much of my recent work centers on my daughter, not as subject, but as a way of seeing. Together, we move through environments that feel both familiar and unsettled—spaces where beauty and unease exist at the same time.
I am interested in what the land remembers, and what we inherit without being told.
I began as a photographer, long before I ever picked up a paintbrush. My later work as a painter—exhibited nationally and internationally—continues to shape how I see, influencing my use of color, composition, and a tendency to distill moments into something symbolic rather than literal.
I studied painting in Venice and later worked under the mentorship of Todd Murphy, whose influence continues to inform my approach to seeing and making.
Photography, for me, is a way of paying attention. Of noticing what might otherwise be missed. Of learning to see.