Concrete Perspective

Concrete Perspective is a photographic system developed from the structural relationships between architecture, landscape, and human intervention. Rather than depicting buildings or sites as subjects, the work examines construction as a condition—using repetition, framing, and spatial tension to reveal how built environments organize perception and behavior.

Presented through carefully controlled viewpoints, the images unfold through shifts in scale, alignment, and surface rather than narrative progression. Structure and atmosphere, order and friction, coexist within a restrained visual field. What emerges is not documentation of place, but a system in which space itself becomes the subject—experienced as pressure, rhythm, and lived perspective.