Illusions of Displacement explores the uneasy space between familiarity and estrangement. Moving through fragments of landscape, architecture, objects, and urban interiors, the work reflects on displacement not as a single event, but as a condition of perception—when orientation slips, memory falters, and ordinary spaces begin to feel unstable.
In black and white, these photographs emphasize atmosphere, texture, and ambiguity over description. The images function less as documents than as fragments of psychological space, where the built world feels provisional, and the familiar turns strange.
At its core, the project considers the fragile nature of place, memory, and belonging. Illusions of Displacement dwells in the tension between presence and dislocation, where certainty gives way to something haunted, unresolved, and quietly unsettled.