I am based in Barcelona, originally from London. I come from a family shaped by working-class and union-based values, where ideas of solidarity, collective responsibility, and social justice were part of everyday life. These foundations continue to inform how I approach photography — not as neutral observation, but as a social and ethical practice.
My work is informed by personal experience of addiction and poverty, as well as years spent traveling the world. During this time, I worked as a volunteer teacher and spent time alongside communities navigating precarity, displacement, and structural inequality. These experiences shaped a commitment to long-term engagement rather than short-term projects.
I work alone and exclusively with analog photography. Each project develops slowly, usually over six months to a year, allowing relationships to form before images do. Trust, accountability, and presence are central to the process.
Alongside my photographic work, I run Esperança, an organisation that provides food and support to people living on the streets. This work is inseparable from my photographic practice and reflects the same commitment to solidarity, redistribution, and care.