Each project uses analog photography as a slow, intentional way of engaging with grassroots initiatives and community-led work and marginalised communities . Shooting on film allows time, presence, and care — values that mirror the realities of the people and projects being documented.

My focus is on process over speed, relationships over spectacle. Each image grows out of collaboration, trust, and time spent on the ground. Rather than extracting stories, my work aims to support, amplify, and archive voices through a practice that is tactile, grounded and deeply personal.

My photographs are not meant to simplify or aestheticize struggle. They exist as visual records of shared moments, everyday resistance, and collective effort — developed slowly, and most importantly shaped by the communities themselves.

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 care were part of everyday life. These foundations continue to shape how I approach photography — not as neutral observation, but as a social and ethical practice.

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, a non profit 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.