What you see, you become.

My work as photojournalist goes beyond documentary; each image reflects an inner search. By gathering photos from assignments, personal projects, and dailylife, I create a symbolic landscape where what I observe not only surrounds me but also transform me

I work as a photojournalist, searching for images through the immediacy and supposed objectivity that documentary work implies. However, every time I approach realities that are foreign yet close to my own, an unconscious phenomenon occurs: a rebound of latent images that, unintentionally, become part of my own search.

In my daily life, the camera does more than document the external world; it also reflects fragments of something deeply personal. Many of the photos in this series did not fit the immediate purpose that brought me to that moment and place, yet now, as I gather them, I begin to see a pattern—a hidden answer to questions I didn’t even know I was asking. These are images that, over time, reveal a personal meaning beyond the instant they were captured.

This series is the result of that process: a collection of moments where something inside me connected with what I saw outside. It is not just a documentary gaze but a symbolic construction, where what I observe transforms me. Through this selection, I blend commissioned work, personal projects, and everyday snapshots in different formats to compose a sensory landscape of what I feel.

Thus, what I see is not merely a representation of the external world but a reflection of my own inner universe. In each image, a part of me remains trapped within the frame, as if photography does not just record reality but expands it to include me within it.

What I see, I become.