As a hobbyist photographer and a professional clinical social worker and psychotherapist, my photography endeavors to embody the essence of both street photography and clinical social work.
I navigate city streets and urban landscapes with my camera, seeking to capture unfiltered moments that encapsulate the human experience. As a viewer of others’ experiences and as viewed through my own, I aim to find beauty in the mundane, shedding light on the overlooked and underrepresented facets of society. I use my photography to magnify the overlooked and highlight missed moments of mindfulness that most of us overlook.
In 2024, the marketing team of the Fernsentrum Berlin requested the use of a photograph taken during a trip to Berlin for their marketing initiative. During the period from 2009 to 2013, I exhibited my work in Connecticut at the various New Haven Arts Festivals. In 2012, Urban Plant Research, a Berlin-based project dedicated to artwork about plants in urban environments, featured my work. In 2010, two photographs from my series, “Emptiness,” were featured in Flock, a juried exhibit held at the gallery ArtSpace New Haven, curated by Patricia Hickson and Kristina Newman-Scott.
My photographs have been collected and hung in the homes and offices of those who have acquired them.
Currently, my primary focus is on my psychotherapy practice. Consequently, I photograph for recreational purposes, as a means of distraction, and to encourage mindfulness. I continue to sell my work (or donate it) to those who are interested. For further inquiries, please visit the contact page.