Shoal Beacon, Holmsund Passage
Between Vaasa and Holmsund, Gulf of Bothnia. Early Winter, 2023
Archival Pigment Print
Edition of 5 + 2 AP

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There is a particular kind of silence that belongs to winter seas in the northern Baltic — not empty, but dense, layered, and quietly luminous, as if the atmosphere itself has weight.

Seen from the ferry crossing between Vaasa and Holmsund in early winter, the landscape does not announce itself so much as gradually assemble: a horizon without drama, a sky built from stacked tones of grey, and a sea that refuses clarity in favour of depth. In the middle distance, a solitary shoal beacon stands anchored in that uncertainty — precise, unyielding, almost calligraphic against the soft dissolution of light and water.

What first draws the eye is not contrast, but restraint. The beacon is not placed against a view; it is held within it, as though the entire scene has been composed around a single point of quiet attention. To the left, faint white breaks register the presence of submerged land — the sea speaking only in fragments, never fully revealing its structure.

There is a peculiar elegance in this kind of northern atmosphere. It does not perform weather or drama. Instead, it accumulates nuance: tonal shifts, softened edges, the slow negotiation between surface and depth. The result is less a landscape than a condition of perception — one that lingers long after the ferry has moved on.

This image belongs to that threshold space between departure and arrival, where the world becomes abstracted just enough to be seen differently.

Proceeds from sales of this work will support the ongoing activities of the Ajmal Samuel Foundation.
 
A 1960's Chevrolet Bel Air running the sun dappled asphalt between Merikarvia and Närpes along the forested coastline abutting the Gulf of Bothnia. Finland.

Proceeds from sales of this work will support the ongoing activities of the Ajmal Samuel Foundation.

Chev Bel Air
Ostrobothnia region Western Norway. 2023
Archival Pigment Print
Edition of 5 + 2 Artist Proofs

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Produced during a journey through northern Norway with the Ajmal Samuel Foundation, this image was photographed along the Ranfjorden shortly before our arrival into Nesna after days of cold rain, fierce winds, and difficult riding conditions.

What remains with me most from that afternoon was not the hardship, but the stillness that emerged between weather systems — a muted Nordic light falling across the fjord, mountains dissolving into mist, and a landscape that seemed less observed than remembered.

Among the works from this journey, this image remains a personal favourite. Its subdued palette and quiet geometry evoke for me something closer to painting than documentation — a scene suspended somewhere between atmosphere, memory, and landscape tradition.

Proceeds from sales of this work will support the ongoing activities of the Ajmal Samuel Foundation.

LOOKING TOWARDS NESNA
Nordland county. Helgeland region. Northern Norway. 2023
Archival Pigment Print
Edition of 5 + 2 AP

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There is a profound stillness to the northern lakes of Sweden — a silence shaped by forest, weather, distance, and geological time.

Tavelsjön lies quietly within the forests of Västerbotten, surrounded by dark woodland, scattered settlements, and the enduring presence of the north. Formed by glacial retreat and flowing water systems, the lake feels less like a destination and more like an ancient geographical memory.

Like much of northern Scandinavia, Tavelsjön carries both natural beauty and folklore. The lake is known locally for tales of the mysterious “Tavelsjö beast,” adding another layer of myth and atmosphere to an already evocative landscape.

Photographed along the shores of Tavelsjön in northern Sweden, this image captivated me for its painterly stillness — a solitary rowing boat resting in the shallows beneath soft northern light. What held my attention most was the delicate underglow beneath the bow, sunlight reflecting back from the water’s surface, and the near imperceptible mirrored form dissolving quietly into the lake below.

Absent of roads, houses, or any visible trace of modern settlement, the scene felt strangely suspended between centuries. Looking at it now, I am reminded less of photography than of the quiet rural landscapes captured by 18th Century Dutch, British, Swedish master painters — meditations on atmosphere, solitude, and still water.

This image forms part of a wider photographic exploration of northern environments, seasonal light, and memory across the Baltic and Scandinavian regions.

Still Waters of Tavelsjön
Tavelsjön, Västerbotten, Swedish Lapland 2023
Archival Pigment Print
Edition of 5 + 2 Artist Proofs

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