Liminal Spaces

These photographs document the transitional areas that exist between destinations— the hallways, lobbies, parking structures, and empty rooms that we pass through without truly seeing. These are the spaces where nothing happens, yet everything feels suspended, caught between what was and what will be.

In the absence of people, these environments reveal their true nature: neither welcoming nor hostile, neither beautiful nor ugly, but existing in a state of pure potentiality. They are the backstage of our daily lives, the infrastructure of transition that we navigate unconsciously.

7 photographs · 2024-2025

About This Collection

This series was photographed over the course of 18 months, primarily during off-hours when these spaces reveal their true character. The images have been minimally processed to preserve the authentic quality of light and atmosphere found in these locations.

The concept of liminal spaces has deep roots in anthropology and psychology— Victor Turner's work on liminality in ritual, Marc Augé's "non-places," and the strange internet phenomenon of "backrooms" imagery. This collection sits at the intersection of documentary photography and conceptual art.