The art of connection
In this series, I combine analog photography with Braille as a way of questioning what it truly means to see.
Photography gives access to the visible: bodies, gestures, faces, traces of human presence. Braille introduces another dimension - a tactile language that cannot be fully understood through sight alone.
Placed over the image, the Braille dots create a quiet paradox: the photograph is visible, yet part of its meaning remains inaccessible. The viewer can see the work but cannot immediately read it.
For me, this tension becomes a metaphor for the inner world of a person. We often see someone's presence, but we do not know their memory, emotion, silence, or experience. The dots become a language for what remains hidden - a layer between visibility and understanding.
The work invites the viewer to slow down, look beyond the surface, and question the authority of vision itself.