The Artificial Landscape

These photographs, taken in the Alps in southern Germany, explore how human-made structures merge with the natural landscape, gradually erasing the line between the artificial and the organic. Nature and infrastructure speak to each other here: a metal t

These photographs, taken in the Alps in southern Germany, explore the idea of the artificial landscape — how human constructions become part of the natural scene, gradually dissolving the boundary between the made and the organic.

Here, nature and infrastructure enter into dialogue: a metal tunnel appears like a temporary growth on the body of the earth, a cable car floats above an alpine meadow like an artifact from a past future. These structures were created for comfort and speed, yet over time they have turned into poetic traces of human presence — a reminder of our attempts to control the landscape while also seeking harmony within it.

The series speaks of stillness after motion, of simple forms that preserve a human presence even without people. It balances between document and metaphor, inviting the viewer to see something alive in the artificial, and the imprint of civilization in nature.