I’m a French photographer, also working as a psychologist and psychotherapist. These two practices are closely connected and deeply influence the way I observe people and the world around me.
In my clinical work, I spend time listening to personal stories, emotions, and inner experiences. Through photography, I approach human presence differently ; not through words, but through images. Instead of listening to stories, I try to capture them. I observe fragments of lives, imagine narratives, and leave space for interpretation.
My photographic work is rooted in attention to small, everyday scenes and subtle emotional moments. I’m drawn to what unfolds quietly : a gesture, a posture, a pause, an unguarded expression. These brief moments often reveal something essential.
I’m particularly touched by ordinary figures and passing encounters, elderly people, grandparents, anonymous faces, moments of solitude or connection. They evoke time, memory, vulnerability, and the continuity of human experience.​​​​​​​
Photography, for me, is a silent form of observation. A way of staying present, attentive, and open, allowing each image to remain incomplete and open to the viewer’s own imagination.
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