Fluid Horizon – Abstract Seascape Photography Series

With Fluid Horizon, created in 2022, I set out to reimagine the way we experience the meeting point of sea and sky. The series emerged from an experimental process: I worked with found glass, weathered and imperfect, using it as a lens to photograph seaside horizons. The glass acted almost like a filter of memory—distorting, softening, and reshaping what the eye normally expects from a seascape.

Instead of depicting the sea in literal clarity, the works dissolve the horizon into fluid bands of color, light, and atmosphere. The boundaries between water and sky blur, evoking the sensation of standing at the shore and watching the line of the horizon shift with the play of time, weather, and perception. The images invite the viewer to linger, to let go of certainty and instead immerse themselves in an open, meditative space.

For me, Fluid Horizon is both about abstraction and about essence. By stripping away detail, the works allow the emotional weight of the seascape to surface: calmness, vastness, fragility, and sometimes the quiet tension of change. The found glass brings its own story—scratches, imperfections, transparency—each trace shaping how the horizon appears.

In this way, the series transforms a universal view into something deeply personal and poetic. It is less about looking at the sea, and more about experiencing the horizon as a shifting metaphor for time, perception, and our place in the world.

Collect works from this series

You may also like

Back to Top