Through photography, I explore the landscape as a living, changing presence—never static, never still. I’m drawn to places where the land tells its story through visible change: the slow return of habitat at Meeth, the layered geology at Crackington, the quiet decay of gun emplacements along the south coast. These places reveal the passing of time in subtle but powerful ways.
Photography, for me, is a form of conversation. It’s how I listen and respond to the landscape. By observing its shifts—erosion, regrowth, weathering—I begin to understand not just the place, but also my relationship with it. The camera becomes a way of noticing, of pausing, of connecting.
My work is rooted in this dialogue. Each photograph is a moment of attention—a response to the landscape’s ongoing transformation. In making these images, I’m not just documenting change—I’m part of the conversation.