Peripheral explores subtle moments and quiet movement at the edges of perception, inviting a slower, intuitive way of seeing where atmosphere and feeling emerge before clarity or definition.
Peripheral is a study of visual awareness beyond the center of the frame. It focuses on the subtle, often overlooked elements that shape how a scene is experienced rather than how it is immediately understood. Light shifts, partial forms, quiet motion, and fleeting gestures become the primary subjects, inviting the viewer to slow down and observe more carefully.
Rather than directing attention with overt composition, the project allows meaning to emerge gradually. Images and motion feel observational, as if encountered rather than arranged. Framing is intentionally restrained, leaving space for ambiguity and interpretation. What matters is not always what is most visible, but what quietly influences the overall atmosphere.
The work reflects how perception operates in real life — rarely fixed, often fragmented, and shaped by context. Peripheral moments carry emotional weight precisely because they resist clarity. They suggest presence without demanding focus, encouraging a more intuitive form of engagement.
This project is less about narrative progression and more about visual sensitivity. It asks the viewer to notice how much of experience happens at the edges, and how meaning often lives in what is not immediately named or centered.


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