Surreal Dreams
These images exist in the space between sleep and waking, where logic bends and reality becomes fluid. They capture moments that feel like memories of dreams— impossible geometries, uncanny juxtapositions, and scenes that shouldn't exist but somehow do.
In surreal photography, the familiar becomes strange and the strange becomes beautiful. Objects float, perspectives shift, and the laws of physics bow to the logic of dreams. These are visions from the unconscious made visible, invitations to question what we think we know about reality.
About This Collection
This collection draws from the rich tradition of surrealist art—from Man Ray's rayographs to René Magritte's impossible juxtapositions. Each image is carefully constructed to evoke the feeling of a half-remembered dream, where logic gives way to pure visual poetry.
The surreal challenges our assumptions about reality and perception. By presenting the impossible as if it were commonplace, these photographs invite viewers to question the boundaries between the real and the imagined, the waking world and the realm of dreams.