Transitional Spaces

Transitional Spaces explores the in-between moments that shape experience—the pauses, crossings, and junctures where change unfolds quietly. It is about the spaces we move through rather than the places we arrive. These environments hold tension between presence and absence, belonging and detachment, motion and stillness. 

Rather than documenting events, the work lingers in anticipation and aftermath. Light, reflection, and composition act as metaphors for uncertainty—how perception wavers and how meaning emerges within instability. The photographs suggest that transition is a state of being. To exist is to move, to wait, to hover between one condition and another. Transitional Spaces is about the poetry of impermanence—the fragile beauty of moments that slip away even as we notice them.

Chapter 1: Space We Inhabit

This triptych explores transitional spaces at three different scales — the personal, the public, and the structural. Each image reveals how thresholds shape human experience, holding tension between what is present and what is absent, between what moves and what waits, between what is built and what decays. Together, they form a narrative of the city as lived and felt in states of in-between.

Chapter 2: Lost in the World

This chapter turns outward to the fragile intersections between people and the spaces they inhabit. Here, the city is no longer a backdrop but a force that shapes, confines, and overwhelms. Each image traces a different register of dislocation—moments when human presence feels precarious against the weight of the world around it.