

Photography
Prairie Earth photography explores the relationship between landscape, light, and the built environment. These images are rooted in observation—moments where material, atmosphere, and place quietly reveal themselves.
Organized into series, each body of work reflects a different way of seeing the world: enduring structures in the landscape, shifting light at dusk, surface and texture, and temporary human interventions within nature.

Photography Series

Still Ground Series
Still Ground explores the quiet relationship between landscape and the structures that inhabit it. Barns, houses, trees, and open ground appear anchored to places shaped by time, weather, and human presence.
Photographed across rural landscapes in multiple regions, these images reflect steadiness, horizon, and the enduring dialogue between land and structure.
Still Ground
Illuminated Series
Illuminated captures moments when light briefly transforms familiar places. Buildings, street corners, and quiet landscapes are photographed at dusk or after dark, when fading daylight, moonlight, and artificial illumination reshape how environments are experienced.
The series explores how light alters perception—creating atmosphere, stillness, and quiet attention within everyday spaces.

Illuminated

Surface Series
Surface explores texture, material, and quiet abstraction through close observation. Weathered wood, stone, rusted metal, and earth become studies in pattern, tone, and time.
By focusing on detail rather than landscape, the series reveals subtle variations in surfaces that are often overlooked, transforming ordinary materials into compositions of texture and form.
Surface
Interventions Series
Interventions explores moments when human-made objects or installations enter the landscape and alter how a place is perceived. Temporary structures and artistic gestures create subtle disruptions within familiar environments.
These images examine the relationship between art, architecture, and landscape, revealing how small interventions can transform the way we see a place.










































































