"La Nuit" is an ongoing photographic study of masculinity, not in its appearance, but in its essence. The series explores how masculinity is manifested in diverse bodies across various genders.
The project engages with questions of gender interpretation and expectations. It asks: What happens to the self when masculinity becomes something you must perform to survive? How much of gender identity is constructed, how much is authentic, and where does truth reside when the surface begins to fracture?
Technically, the images were created using slow shutter speeds and patience, allowing motion and blur to surface naturally. I wanted the outcome to resist clarity, much in contrast to the way we still perceive gender roles.
La Nuit was developed collaboratively with the subjects of different genders, who trusted me with moments of stillness, vulnerability, and strain. It was important to me to transform a shared experience where tension, exhaustion, and intimacy coexist.
This project marked a significant evolution in my practice. It pushed me further into the spaces where clarity disappears, where tension, fracture, and abstraction create meaning. La Nuit taught me to trust the blur, to lean into uncertainty, and to let the image convey its own meaning. It deepened my ongoing exploration of identity, performance, expectation, survival, and the emotional weight of questions that continue to shape my work.





