The Tree Series reflects on trees as guardians of memory and silent witnesses of time.
Through movement and abstraction, branches and trunks dissolve into living brushstrokes, evoking impressionist echoes of resilience.
Each image becomes an allegory of rootedness and fragility — the enduring tension between permanence and change.

Stony Tree grows where no life should: rooted in stone, it rises against all odds. The ground beneath is paved like a sky of rocks, turning earth into something celestial. The tree becomes both symbol and survivor — a vision of resilience, bridging the mineral and the living. Stony Tree abstract ICM photograph — a tree rooted in stone with a surreal rocky sky.

Orange Tree rises in solitude, dry and fragile against a landscape of drought. Stripped of abundance, it becomes a figure of endurance and melancholy — a reminder of nature’s vulnerability and strength.

In Spring Forest I wanted to capture the precise instant when the forest awakens —
when colour, motion and light begin to breathe in the same rhythm.
Through intentional movement, the trees lose their solidity and become vibration;
matter turns into energy, and energy into warmth.

Ginkgo Biloba appears as a living relic — a tree of resilience and memory. Its delicate fan-shaped leaves veil a history of endurance, turning survival itself into abstraction and symbol.

Lemon Tree stands luminous in its simplicity. Amid branches and fruit, light turns the ordinary into pattern, where nature’s everyday presence becomes abstraction and quiet beauty

Olive Tree (V1) reveals the ancient strength of a trunk twisted by time. Its rough surface carries the memory of centuries, where resilience turns into form and nature becomes sculpture

Olive Tree (v2) shows a different presence: less monumental, more intimate. The branches spread with lighter rhythm, suggesting renewal and continuity. It is not the weight of centuries but the pulse of life still unfolding

Laurel with Carpet Skin reveals the tree’s surface as layered texture, like a woven fabric spread across the trunk. What is usually unnoticed becomes pattern and skin, turning bark into abstraction

Medlar presents a tree marked by irregular branches and raw texture. Its form resists harmony, embodying both resilience and dissonance — a vision where nature asserts its strength through imperfection.

Falling Dreamtree transforms the vision of a leaning tree into something dreamlike. The movement of the camera turns the natural form into a shifting presence, suspended between falling and floating.