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I wanted to choose twenty photos that reflect how my personal experiences shape the way I see and interpret the world around me. Rather than creating staged images, I focused on moments that naturally caught my attention, details, lighting, framing, or situations that felt familiar but slightly meaningful when looked at more closely. Each photograph representsa small point of perception, and together they form a visual record of how I notice patterns and connections in everyday environments. The project to me wasn’t about presenting a single narrative, but about showing how lived experience influences what stands out, what feels important, and how meaning is constructed through observation.
“Humor as a system of communications and as a probe of our environment — of what's really going on — affords us our most appealing anti-environmental tool. It does not deal in theory, but in immediate experience, and is often the best guide to changing perceptions.”
In these photographs, humor appears more so through unexpected moments or moments that slightly challenge expectations. Humor is something I naturally lean on in how I understand the world, so it felt important to let it guide this project too. Sometimes it shows up in moments that feel awkward, ironic, or just slightly off, and those are usually the things that stick with me the most.

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