"Body Language (Limbo)" is a photographic series that captures candid moments of everyday life through the fragmented lens of the human form — a foot mid-step, a hand suspended in gesture, an arm reaching without a face to explain it. Across cities and cultures spanning the world, these images isolate limbs and bodies in a way that feels both surreal and familiar, revealing a silent choreography that often goes unnoticed.
Rather than showing people in full, the series focuses on the parts we use to move through the world — to touch, to hold, to push away, to express without speaking. In the absence of heads and faces, what’s left is something more universal: the language of motion, posture, tension, and proximity. A story told through instinct rather than identity.
Sometimes humorous, sometimes disorienting, the images play with visual illusion, layering, and chance. Limbs appear to float, merge, or multiply. People connect — or miss each other — in subtle, physical ways. These partial glimpses suggest not only presence, but also absence. What we don’t see becomes just as important as what we do.
This work is ultimately about how the body reveals the lives we lead — through rhythm, through contact, through moments suspended between connection and isolation. It invites the viewer to observe how much can be communicated without the verbal, or even the mouth or face.