The presentation brings together portraits shot on film from this decade-long project, exploring what it means for women to be seen and heard on their own terms. It offers an alternative gaze—one rooted in tenderness, curiosity, and the conviction that every woman's interior life deserves deep attention.
The photographs on view refuse the anonymous, often predatory gaze of street photography. Each portrait is shaped by conversation, negotiated access, and the crossing of a threshold—from public to private space, from stranger to participant. The domestic interiors are not mere backdrops but active participants in the portraits, revealing how women construct meaning and selfhood through the spaces they inhabit.