I am a Swiss photographer whose work moves between documentary observation, visual inquiry, and long-term engagement with landscape. Trained as a biologist and shaped by decades of teaching, field research, and photography, I am interested in how places carry traces of ecological change, human intervention, memory, and power. My images often begin in close observation, but they aim beyond description toward a deeper reading of what a landscape reveals and what it tries to conceal.
I work across projects that focus on mountains, forests, agricultural land, and other transformed environments. Rather than treating photography as simple illustration, I use it as a way of questioning the visible: how territory is shaped, managed, marketed, and imagined.
My practice is informed by scientific attention as much as by lived experience, and seeks a balance between precision, ambiguity, and critical distance.
Much of my work grows out of time spent in the field and out of sustained familiarity with the places I photograph. I am drawn to landscapes where natural processes and human systems collide, overlap, or quietly contradict one another.
Through photography, I try to make these tensions visible without closing them down.