DO WE CLICK
A visual exploration of connection, chemistry, and the subtle space between people.
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What makes people choose each other — even for a moment?

Do We Click is an ongoing visual study of how humans relate: lovers, friends, parents, strangers.


The moments of closeness and distance. The quiet tension. The truth that lives in the space between.

ARTIST STATEMENT 
We meet thousands of people in our lives, but only with a few do we feel something shift in the air — the sense that we click.

This series explores that shift.
I photograph pairs of people in the honesty of their relationship:
the tenderness, the contradiction, the gravity, the humor, the unspoken dialogue.

Some are deeply connected. Some are falling apart. Some are simply existing in the same room for the first time.

I’m interested in what happens right before a touch, right after a breath, in the moments when someone looks away — or cannot look away.

Do We Click is not about perfect poses. It’s about the realness of connection:
the magnetic pull, the push, the resistance, the surrender, the comfort, the chaos, and the stillness.

Every pair brings a different chemistry.
Every session becomes its own conversation.
Every image asks the same question — why you? why now?
THE PAIRS
  • Lovers
    Intimacy, vulnerability, desire, boundaries, emotional proximity.
    The way lovers hold each other when they forget the camera is there.
  • Friends
    Shared history, unspoken jokes, complicated love, chosen family.
    The portrait of people who choose each other again and again.
  • Parents & Children
    Generational tenderness, inherited patterns, the tension of growing and letting go.
    How connection changes, deepens, and rewrites itself over time.
  • Strangers
    Two people meeting for the first time.
    What happens when two energies collide without context?
Every session begins with a conversation.
I want to understand the dynamic — the history, the contrast, the truth.
I photograph the space between people, not just their faces.

There is no posing.
There is only presence.

My role is to witness what already exists.