Kungsleden photo exhibition.

Kungsleden photo exhibition.

In 2021 I was invited to participate in a photography event called „Light.sensitives” organised by the Department of Landscape and Cultural Heritage at John Paul II University in Kraków. The focus of the event, which brought together several writers and artists, was to showcase different visual forms of storytelling and to answer the question of what it is like to look at the world through the lens of a camera or camcorder. 

“It is a real art to be able to perceive what escapes the attention of most people. Sometimes it is emotions, feelings, sometimes it is a ray of sunlight touching the leaves, sometimes it is a random arrangement of colours, sometimes it is a plant growing against logic on a pavement. It varies… But the essence is always that the framed reality has to tell a story.”

(university’s website event description)

My story and photo exhibition was about one of the most beautiful trekking routes in the world, the Kungsleden, which I visited 4 times. I fell in love with the far north, with this trail, with the unique and beautiful landscape, with the emptiness and the power of nature, which you can feel with all your senses. The emptiness gives you a sense of freedom, but nature is a constant reminder to be careful because you are insignificant. In my photographs I wanted to show the beauty of this place, carved by nature over millions of years without human interference, and perhaps infect others with this beauty. There are few places on earth where you can stand, look to the horizon and not see the concrete monuments of civilisation. Kungsleden is one of them.

This is a selection of photographs taken over several years on the trail and presented in the exhibition. Enjoy!

Aesthetica magazine.

Aesthetica magazine.

Being published in a prestigious magazine was an important event for me as an artist and provided me with a platform to present myself to a wide audience in the industry. In 2021, Aesthetica magazine featured one of my works entitled ‘Paris, Paris’ in its 100th anniversary issue. The work featured was made using the argyrotype process on handmade paper and is framed in an oak frame burnt on the front. The base for the print was a digital photograph I took in Paris in 2019.

This particular issue also delves into various art movements, influential artists and groundbreaking works that are shaping the current art world. 

I particularly recommend this issue, which is available to download online >here< (paid) but subsequent issues are just as interesting.