Photography is where I leave everything behind — and where I feel most connected. It’s my way of listening to the world with full attention. Through the lens, I slow down, observe, and translate the quiet details that hold a person’s story.

My life has long been rooted in people — in their dignity, their resilience, and the truths that often go unseen. As an international lawyer working in gender‑based violence, the third sector, and consular affairs, I’ve spent years accompanying individuals through some of their most vulnerable moments. That experience inevitably threads itself into my photography: the same commitment to honouring stories, the same belief that tenderness can reveal what dominant narratives overlook.

I’m drawn to causes, to stories that ask for care. I believe in the quiet power of images to question what is taken for granted, to open space for reflection, and to bring visibility to what often remains hidden.

And always, I follow light — those fleeting pockets that transform an ordinary second into something extraordinary. In the quiet meeting between light and life, stories reveal themselves in ways that feel both fragile and urgent.