Where We Touch ongoing photographic series explores relationships between plants, insects, fungi, and other non-human forms of life through a non-human centered lens. Rather than isolating subjects or categorizing them by species, I photograph moments of proximity, overlap, and entanglement, where boundaries between organisms begin to blur.
Documenting New York City and nearby mountains, I move slowly through gardens, sidewalks, and natural spaces, allowing encounters to emerge rather than be staged. Trees, pollens, insects, moss, rocks, and mushrooms appear not as separate entities, but as participants within shared ecological systems shaped by time, weather, and human presence.
This practice resists hierarchical ways of seeing nature as background or resource. Instead, it treats the environment as a network of reciprocal relationships, where visibility is partial and perspective is always situated. As an ongoing inquiry, the work remains open-ended, prioritizing attentiveness and coexistence over fixed conclusions or classification.