Tibetans
This body of work emerges from my time spent alongside Tibetan people in the context of their everyday lives. The photographs are not centered on ritual, spectacle, or belief as subject matter. Instead, they remain with ordinary moments—work, rest, movement, and waiting—where spiritual orientation is present without being declared.
What interests me is not faith as an image, but faith as a condition: something that quietly shapes posture, rhythm, and attention. In these moments, belief does not interrupt daily life; it supports it. The sacred and the ordinary are not separated. They coexist.
I do not attempt to explain or interpret this way of life. The photographs are the result of prolonged presence and shared time, where meaning is neither extracted nor summarized. What remains are traces of encounters—moments where life continues without asking to be represented.
Project period: 2003–2010
Exhibition: none
Publication: none