This series is a type of study through transition, attending to everyday moments that emerge when familiar structures fall away and presence quietly takes their place.
These photographs were made in the aftermath of change, when urgency softened and ordinary life began to reassert itself. Rather than framing disruption or loss, the work attends to what remains: domestic rituals, temporary spaces, companionship, and objects encountered through daily life.
The images do not seek resolution or narrative closure; they stay with the unfinished, allowing moments to exist as they are rather than what they represent.
Drawn from new work, they gather and observe quiet fragments of ordinary life — bodies at rest, domestic spaces, trees, light, and small gestures of attention. Pain and loss are present, but they are not aestheticised or used as gravity.
What emerges instead is a quiet relief: subtle humour, calm, and clarity, as life continues without the need to prove resilience. After the Move is not about starting again, but about how to live more fully in the now.