This upcoming project focuses on raising awareness for the environment and wildlife, exploring the quiet damage that often goes unnoticed. It’s not about shock value or dramatic imagery, but about slowing people down and asking them to really look at the world around them.
The idea came from noticing how easy it is to disconnect from environmental issues when they don’t feel immediate. Wildlife loss, habitat destruction, and environmental neglect often happen quietly, out of sight, until the damage is already done.
Exploring awareness through visual storytelling
This project will use photography and visual design to tell subtle stories about nature, absence, and change. Rather than pointing fingers, the work aims to create moments of reflection - encouraging viewers to question their relationship with the environment and the impact of everyday choices.
Much like my previous work, discomfort plays a role here too. Not in an aggressive way, but through emptiness, contrast, and the suggestion of what’s missing. The goal is to make the viewer pause and sit with that feeling.
Why wildlife matters
Wildlife is often treated as something separate from human life, when in reality it’s deeply connected to it. This project looks at animals and natural spaces not as distant subjects, but as part of a shared environment that’s increasingly under pressure. Humans weren't here first we need to respect that this was once and still is the land of animals.
"The bear isn't crossing the road, The road is crossing the forest." - Zak Diamond
By focusing on awareness rather than solutions, the work aims to open conversations - about responsibility, care, and what we choose to ignore until it’s too late.
Where this project is heading
- Developing a visual language focused on absence and fragility.
- Photographing natural spaces and wildlife with minimal intervention.
- Using design to communicate environmental impact without overwhelm.
- Encouraging reflection rather than instant answers.
This project is still evolving. Right now, it exists as research, ideas, and early visuals - but the intention is clear. To create work that quietly reminds people what’s at stake, and why paying attention still matters.
A small question with a simple answer
How could you help the Earth, slowly?
Try this: every time you go out, pick up ten pieces of litter and put them in the corresponding bin. It’s small, it’s quiet, and it doesn’t demand attention — but done consistently, it adds up.