Berlin – Concrete Narratives and Invisible Borders
Concrete Narratives and Invisible Borders | In this body of work, Berlin does not appear as a documented city but as a psychogeographic field of resonance. The works move between visibility and fragmentation, between urban surfaces and the invisible forces that structure memory, movement, and identity. Architecture is not treated as a static backdrop, but as an active carrier of collective narratives, ruptures, and transitions.
The series explores Berlin as a city in permanent transformation: historical layers overlap with contemporary acceleration, social spaces shift, and borders disappear while simultaneously re-emerging. Within these photographic condensations, spaces emerge in which reality and perception collapse into one another. Traces of light, motion blur, and digital overlays create urban apparitions — fragile moments suspended between control and dissolution.
“Concrete Narratives and Invisible Borders” understands the city as an emotional archive. The works speak of transit, isolation, nightlife, infrastructure, and the hidden choreographies of everyday life. Berlin is not presented as an iconic destination, but as a condition: raw, unstable, contradictory, and at the same time charged with poetic intensity.





