Landscape photography has been part of my life for many years. It began as a simple instinct—stopping to frame what caught my eye—and grew into something more deliberate yet still rooted in that first impulse. After 17 years, what moves me hasn’t changed: it’s the connection between place, light, and time—not in a grand sense, but in the quiet way a shadow falls or a path bends.
Some of the photographs in this gallery were taken long ago. Others are more recent, including a few shots with a drone—something I’ve added to explore space and structure from above. What brings them together isn’t a formula or style, but a way of being present.
I approach landscape photography not to impress but to observe, to notice. Sometimes, that leads to quiet images, other times to ones that feel more open or intense—but always with attention to what’s really there. The choices I make, from composition to editing, aim to respect the subject as much as reveal it.
What you’ll find here is a series of photographs where something aligned—visually, emotionally, or simply in how it felt to stand in that place. The views may vary in mood and location, but all reflect a way of seeing shaped by time, presence, and craft.
For a smaller selection of landscape photographs chosen specifically for their artistic tone and standalone presence, feel free to visit my profile on Satchi Art.
Based in Basel, Switzerland