My photography is not about perfection. It is about presence. I chase emotion over symmetry, soul over sharpness. Whether bathed in the disciplined serenity of a Kyoto morning, where tradition and technology bow in unison, or wandering beneath the ochre sun of a forgotten African road, I try to see not just what stands before me — but what breathes behind it.

Mark Twain once wrote: “Travel is fatal to prejudice, bigotry, and narrow-mindedness.” This quote is my compass. It reminds me that through honest travel — and through honest photography — we unlearn borders, soften our judgments, and remember our shared humanity. Each image I take is an invitation to look closer, to feel deeper, to leave assumptions behind.

Outside the frame, I work in the field of cardiovascular medical devices, helping deliver life-saving innovations to hospitals and surgeons across the Middle East. It’s a discipline that mirrors my photography in surprising ways — precise, purposeful, and deeply human.

I shoot with Sony, Leica, Fujifilm, Canon, and Pentax — but no camera can replace curiosity. In the end, my truest lens is the one I carry inside me: a vision shaped by a life lived between cultures, drawn to stillness, guided by empathy.

Thank you for being here. I hope something in these photographs speaks to you — not just of where I’ve been, but of what we all share.