There is a certain discipline in choosing to work only in shadow— a photographer's meditation on what is revealed when you strip away the comfort of full exposure and sit with what remains.
Selected work from the archive
There is a discipline in darkness that daylight cannot teach. When I began shooting exclusively at night—or in the grey hours before and after it—I thought I was simply chasing aesthetic. What I found instead was a constraint that clarified everything. You cannot rely on beauty when beauty has retreated. You must find structure.
"Every photograph is a certificate of presence. But what does it mean to certify the presence of shadow?"
Working in low light forces a confrontation with what you actually believe about a scene. The grain that appears in a pushed ISO is not failure—it is honesty. It is the image admitting the conditions of its own making. This is what I have come to love about it.