2014-2025
Frails is a photographic project exploring the fragile, tender, and complex landscape of love. It documents
my relationship with my partner, across quiet moments, chaotic ones, staged scenes, and raw snapshots.
The photographs range from everyday intimacy to sexually charged images, many taken instinctively
on a phone, unfiltered and immediate. Others are carefully composed, asking: how do we want to be seen?
These portraits are interwoven with images of flowers, petals, and natural elements that evoke the beauty and
transience of intimacy.
By capturing this relationship, Frails becomes an archive of trust, desire, boredom, and negotiation. It
exists in the in-between, where the personal and political meet not through slogans, but through skin, gestures,
and attention. It resists the expectation that love and sexuality must be either hidden or hyper-visible. It
is not a confession. It is not a performance. It simply exists.
To love freely and to document love without apology can still be a form of resistance, especially
when emotional expression and bodily desire are shaped and constrained by social norms, algorithms, and
cultural expectations. Frails knots together care and lust, presence and absence, fear and pleasure. It asks:
who decides what intimacy should look like? What forms of love are allowed to be soft, messy, or unguarded?

In a world that demands clarity and control, Frails embraces uncertainty. Love here is not idealised,
but lived. Vulnerable. Visible. Unfolding.
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