CONVERSATIONS IN MOTION

As a professor, I share with my students the belief that design is a conversation — one shaped by the placement of objects and the moods and meanings they create. That dialogue continues when the work is viewed, shifting and expanding through the eyes of its audience. As a photographer, I see this vernacular of design everywhere: in the abstract arrangements of signage, in fleeting reflections, and across the networks of built structures. For years I’ve used photography to document these visual exchanges, building an archive centered on line, space, and texture. Individually, the images function as a catalogue of seeing; collectively, they become components in a larger visual language. These digital compositions are assembled from photographs that share no thematic origin, yet they speak to one another through form and gesture, creating the kind of energetic visual banter you want to step into—a conversation in motion.