Invisible Garden examines landscape as a lived, designed, and maintained environment. Working with analog photography, I move through gardens and urban green spaces, observing how relationships between people and plant life are shaped through pathways, labels, borders, and systems of care.

Rather than isolating botanical subjects, the images attend to edges, infrastructures, and traces of maintenance, revealing how nature is organized, narrated, and sustained over time. Several photographs were made within the New York Botanical Garden, while others extend into other cities, situating the garden within a broader urban ecology.

By walking slowly and photographing attentively, I approach the landscape not as an untouched ideal, but as something continuously arranged through human intention and labor. This work reflects on how power, care, and cultural values are embedded in public environments, shaping how we collectively see, manage, and relate to the non-human world.