Architectural Photography
My architectural photography explores the built landscape of New York State, from Albany to Buffalo, focusing on places shaped by time. I’m drawn to buildings caught between past and present—factories, warehouses, storefronts, and public spaces that carry visible traces of what they once were.
Peeling paint, altered facades, worn surfaces, and shifting light reveal layers of history alongside newer changes. I’m interested in that overlap, where the past remains embedded in the present rather than erased by it.
I use the camera as a creative tool rather than a purely documentary one. Framing, perspective, and light allow me to explore line, texture, shadow, and form, often pushing familiar structures toward abstraction.
The towns and cities between Albany and Buffalo offer a constant record of change. Through this work, I invite viewers to slow down and look more closely at the buildings they pass every day, and to consider how time quietly shapes the places we inhabit.