“49 Sentences” is a visual diary — fragments of notes, invisible dialogues, and moods of
everyday life. This series is not an objective record of reality; each frame marks the trace of
my emotions — a pause, a moment of stillness, the silence of that instant, and the exact
sentences I can express through images.
Photography here is a living practice and a grounding force: a way to return to the world, to
pay attention to fleeting beauty, and to rediscover the joy of being immersed in it. The fortynine sentences are drawn from small written fragments — moments of reflection that visually
take form and define the series. They function as cut-out instants, not bound to objects
themselves, but as emotional documentation.
The working process unfolds through searching — never for something specific, but for a
space or detail that makes me stop. A frame is captured in resonance with mood, sound, or
impression; later the negatives are developed and printed in the darkroom. Printing becomes
another creative stage: not a technical act, but a process of release, where paper absorbs inner
weight and transforms it into a visual testimony.
The exhibition invites the viewer to pause, to step outside the rush of rhythm, and to listen to
these quiet monologues — photographs that are more than images, companions in an inner
dialogue.