Finding beauty in the ordinary.
I am a landscape photographer working mainly in the Swiss Alps. My work grows out of long walks, repeated places, and time spent waiting rather than searching. I am drawn to moments when the landscape slows down, when fog settles, light fades, and snow softens forms, and when silence becomes almost visible.
I photograph mountains, forests, and alpine structures as spaces to inhabit rather than scenes to describe. Traces of human presence appear quietly in my images, often secondary to atmosphere and light. What interests me is scale, stillness, and the fragile balance between permanence and disappearance.
My approach is intuitive and patient. I return to the same locations across seasons, observing how weather and light reshape familiar forms. Fog, winter light, and subdued tones are central to my work, not as effects but as conditions that slow perception and invite attention.
I do not aim to explain the landscape or impose a narrative. Instead, I want the images to remain open, offering a place to pause and to experience the quiet presence of land over time.