
Daily Commute
This image transforms a daily commute into a quiet inner monologue within the city.


This image transforms a daily commute into a quiet inner monologue within the city.

Everyday spaces are compressed into planes, grids, signs, and visual rhythm.

This series focuses on urban walls, photographed frontally and flattened within the frame to observe the accumulated colors, textures, graffiti, signs, and traces of time. The wall is not only an architectural boundary, but also a kind of urban message board, recording the visual layers shaped by both human activity and natural erosion.

Shaped like the curves of turning pages, this library creates an open field where knowledge flows freely and people, architecture, and environment interconnect.
Start from repeated urban elements: glass, lines, signs, platforms, passages, and shadows.
Use edges, reflections, and visual compression to question what is real and what is constructed.
Build series through rhythm, proportion, repetition, tone, and the relationship between images.

His work observes the city as a constructed image: a place where reflections, architectural fragments, road markings, and commuting scenes form a quiet language of contemporary life.
His work has received IPA Honorable Mention, BIFA Bronze Winner, TIFA Bronze Winner, and multiple Leica LFI selections.
Available for photography projects, editorial features, portfolio reviews, and visual research collaborations.