“Lost In Florida”

“Lost In Florida” is a photographic exploration of memory, loss, and belonging — a visual elegy to a life once lived and now scattered like salt in the humid air. This series is born from my time in Florida, a place that held both my becoming and my undoing. Each image is a fragment — a remnant of emotion, landscape, and time, blurred by distance yet illuminated by nostalgia.

Through the camera, I return to the spaces where I once existed — to the wild lots where palms reclaim the silence, to the coral light that lingers on walls faded by heat and years, the traces of human presence washed away by the tide. These photographs are not records of a place, but echoes of what remains when a life slips between remembering and forgetting.

“Lost In Florida” lives in the tension between the visible and the vanished. The images hold the residue of experiences too fragile to name — love, exile, isolation, and renewal. The camera becomes both an anchor and a mirror, translating emotional debris into visual poetry.

This work is deeply biographical, but it transcends the personal. It speaks to the universal act of losing and remembering — the way we build our identities around places that no longer hold us, and how photographs become the only tangible evidence of what was once real.

In these images, Florida slips its borders and becomes a fever dream — a humid, sun-bleached consciousness where the air itself remembers. Here, memory seeps through the light, and imagination fogs the lens.I wander the threshold between what’s real and what’s recalled, both lost and found in the shimmer.