Between Communication and Photography – My Digital Perspective
I work daily with digital communication—sometimes I ask myself: when does information truly gain meaning? Words alone often aren’t enough to express what I really want to say. That’s why I pick up a camera. For me, photography is a means to make intensity, mood, and association visible.




My Photographic Approach: Experimentation over Perfection
I don’t see myself as a professional photographer, but rather as a visual experimenter. My camera—most often my smartphone—is my constant companion. On my Pexels profile, I deliberately upload a variety of scenes that invite discovery.
My Pexels-Portfolio

Photography as Part of My Digital Communication
In an era where smartphones are high-performance media tools and images can be shared in seconds, I deliberately use photography as part of my communication. My visual experiments are not just “flashes of inspiration,” but rather visual impulses that create meaning where words fall too flat.
A Language Spoken by Images
Despite YouTube videos and other digital channels, photography remains for me an especially intense medium. It demands mindfulness: slowness, careful observation—and opens access to moods that often get lost in the digital noise. Some of my images get many downloads, others go unnoticed—much like my YouTube clips, which sometimes attract hundreds of thousands of viewers and sometimes only a few.
For me, photography is an instrumental part of my thinking and communication. Every image is an attempt to capture a moment, a mood, or a story — and thus an invitation to the viewer to shift their own perspective. Whether city, nature, architecture, or details — the images in my portfolio are snapshots, experiments, and forms of expression all at once.

