I'm a fine art photographer born and living in Melbourne, Australia. Since childhood I have had a fascination with architecture and cityscapes, and I naturally gravitated to photographing architectural subjects — a passion that has taken me from Melbourne to New York, London, and beyond.
I work primarily in black and white, frequently using long exposure techniques to realise my vision. My aim is to create moody, minimalist images that strip away the noise and reveal the pure form and structure of the built environment. My work has been recognised in numerous international photography awards and exhibited across Australia, Europe and the United States.
Architecture
The built environment has always been my subject. I photograph architecture not to document it, but to distil it — finding in facades, towers, and civic structures the geometric clarity that function obscures. Working in black and white, I use light, shadow, and considered framing to reduce the familiar to pure form.
Parametric Symmetry
The built environment is my raw material. I begin with a photograph — a building, a facade, a skyline — and through a process of symmetrical reconstruction, I strip away its function, its context, its civic identity, until what remains is pure geometric logic.
Parametric Symmetry is a systematic application of mirroring, rotation, and compounding across multiple axes, transforming architectural source material into forms that pulsate, compress, radiate, and orbit. The result is never predetermined. Each work is discovered through iteration — the symmetry latent within the original photograph long before the process begins. I simply make it visible.
Architecture already encodes order — in its repetition, its geometry, its structural rhythm. My process amplifies that order until the building becomes something else entirely: mandala, engine, vortex, crown. The familiar is dissolved to reveal the system within.
These works exist beyond the boundaries of photography and architectural image-making. They are photographs, but they are also something photography has not traditionally been.