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LINEA SERiES

Portraits of rhythm and balance

Linea is a study in shape, repetition, and restraint - a visual dialogue between architecture and abstraction.

 

These are photographs of buildings, mostly. But they’re also portraits of rhythm, balance, and the way design can become art by accident.
Sometimes it's the clean divide between sky and wall, sometimes it’s the chaos of windows refusing to line up properly. 


It's an affectionate look at order, repetition, and the occasional rogue shadow doing its own thing.

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Colour optional. Geometry essential

While many of these images use colour, often in bold, saturated blocks, some are stripped back to monochrome. The through-line isn’t the palette, it’s the pattern: stripes, grids, shadows, reflections.

The work plays with contrasts between surface and depth, between what a building is and how it feels. A window can become a square of silence. A façade might read like a barcode.

Linea isn’t about architecture in the usual sense - there are no sweeping skylines or perfect landmarks. It’s about fragments, intersections, and the moments where cities almost forget to be useful and just become beautiful.

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From structure to abstraction

There’s a kind of minimalism in this series - not in terms of content, but in the way each image is distilled.


A patch of wall. A slice of glass. A shadow that cuts the frame in half like a pencil mark. The photographs flatten the world into compositions where function gives way to form.

These aren’t just buildings. They’re visual puzzles; both precise and ambiguous. They invite you to pause, align yourself with a window ledge or an echoing angle, and see the built world as a canvas of quiet surprises.

LINEA GALLERY.
Where form creates meaning.

SAY Hi

You can get in touch by clicking below. 

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