Architecture
Architecture marks the edges of movement. Houses, factories, facades, and utilitarian structures appear only for a moment, framed by the constant outline of the car window. What normally stands still becomes temporary: a brief encounter between form, distance, and speed.
The fixed viewpoint reduces architecture to its essentials. Lines, surfaces, proportions. Details fade, structures emerge. In motion, buildings turn into graphic shapes – rhythm, shadow, mass. Their function recedes; what remains is the visual logic of their construction.
This subseries collects fragments of urban and rural architecture: industrial complexes, residential blocks, storage halls, institutions, and transitional spaces. Places usually passed without attention gain clarity through the repetition of the frame. Each structure becomes part of a visual system that can only be perceived through movement.
Architecture is less documentation than observation – a study of how buildings reveal themselves when seen at a distance, at speed, and through a fixed frame. A quiet typology of the built environment, shaped by motion.