Façades
I isolate architectural details so they read as form rather than place. What appears fixed begins to shift with light, context, and point of view. These images explore structure as something fluid rather than permanent.
About this work
Architecture presents itself as stable—grids of glass and concrete projecting order, permanence, and control. These structures appear fixed and rational: static objects in a dynamic world. But permanence depends on where we stand.
Light shifts. Weather intervenes. Reflections fracture certainty. A slight change in vantage point alters alignment and compresses space. What seems solid begins to loosen under sustained attention.
This series traces a movement from structural clarity toward perceptual ambiguity. Repetition gives way to distortion. Planes tilt. Patterns dissolve into fluid abstraction. The grid remains, but its authority softens.
These façades suggest that stability is conditional. What appears firm and enduring is continually reshaped by context and point of view. Permanence may be less a fixed state than a temporary agreement between object and observer––one that can quietly shift, or mislead, depending on how and where we look.
The structures do not collapse. They transform.