Entanglement: where distance dissolves.
London, UK - Tokyo, Japan
My journey through the past twelve months became an intricate exploration of human connection. Roaming across 15 countries and 29 cities, I found myself capturing moments that speak to the unseen threads connecting us all—moments that would eventually coalesce into "Entanglement," an experimental photo study that challenges our perception of separation and distance.
New York, New York - San Francisco, California
The project began with diptychs—pairings of images that explores visual symmetries between seemingly unrelated places. The phenomenon of quantum entanglement—where particles remain inexplicably connected regardless of the distance between them—provided both the name and theoretical foundation for this project. Einstein and Schrödinger used this concept to describe one of nature's most mysterious behaviors, and it serves as a powerful metaphor for human connection.
Berlin, Germany - Colombo, Sri Lanka
Like a visual poem, these juxtapositions tell stories of unexpected harmony: the structured geometry of Berlin's architecture finding its echo in the organic patterns of Sri Lanka, each pairing is a parallel that exist in our world. These visual dialogues weave together fragments of my travels into a narrative of shared experience, suggesting that perhaps we're all closer than we think.
Mexico City, Mexico - Bora Bora, French Polynesia
I found myself staring through the bridge in Zurich, thinking how cities build physical bridges to span rivers and valleys, we still face invisible walls between cultures, communities, and ideologies.
Portland, USA - Zurich, Switzerland
We need more than physical infrastructure—we need emotional and cultural bridges to truly connect, embrace our differences, and reach understanding across borders.
Sao Paulo, Brazil - Tokyo, Japan
Each diptych is an invitation to ponder the intricate web of relationships that shapes our existence and the universe at large.
Paris, France - San Francisco
In a world that often emphasizes our differences, these images whisper of our underlying unity, suggesting that perhaps, like quantum particles, we too are all imperceptibly but fundamentally connected.