Cityshapes is a wandering through the multiple surfaces of the contemporary city.
The images map its epidermis — the lines, patterns, traces, and reflections that shape its daily rhythm. The camera observes architectural lines, repeating motifs, and dense surfaces of glass and concrete, while simultaneously encountering the traces of human presence.
The city is revealed as a dynamic construction of overlapping images, like a palimpsest of memory that is constantly being renewed. In the black-and-white frames, architecture does not function as a simple shell; it becomes a field where light, geometry, and human presence meet and transform one another. Reflections — at times clear, at times fractured — act like fissures.
They reveal that the city is not only its material structure but also the multiplicity of its images: what it projects, what it hides, what it remembers. Cityshapes is a portrait of the city not as it appears, but as it breathes — through lines, reflections, silences, and shadows that merge into a single visual narrative.
In this way, the series unveils the city as an organism that inscribes upon its own surface a silent, ever-changing history.











