Blindspot
Blindspot is an exploration of what sits at the edges of perception. Photographed in a square format and arranged as diptychs, the work pairs moments that are easily overlooked: a limb slipping from shadow, a mannequin posed as a surrogate body, a single word on a façade offering an unintended mirror. These fragments, placed side by side, reveal how much of daily life is encountered without being fully recognised.
In this series, the street becomes a constructed environment, a stage where human presence is suggested more than shown. Light, surface, and structure carry the narrative, while the viewer is asked to navigate the gap between what is visible and what is implied. The diptych format creates tension and resonance, allowing meaning to emerge in the space between images, where connection is uncertain and interpretation is active.
Created after an earlier body of work made in Palestine, where intensity and fracture shaped every scene, Blindspot moves toward restraint. The coolness and clarity of these images are not detachment but recalibration, an instinct to rebuild a way of seeing by focusing on subtlety, order, and the minor details that hold a city together.
Seen through the lens of the wider practice, Blindspot marks an early inquiry into the questions that now define the work: the difference between what is shown and what is concealed, the structures that shape how we see, and the quiet spaces where meaning collects unnoticed. It is a study of the peripheral, the partially seen, and the overlooked architecture of everyday life, an attempt to understand how much remains unacknowledged in plain sight..