Twelve Quiet Frames
A Year in Stillness
This project documents a single landscape observed repeatedly across the course of one year.
Each month, I return to the same location and photograph one frame. The changes are often subtle: shifts in light, weather patterns, vegetation, and seasonal colour. Through this repetition, the series traces the slow temporal rhythms that shape landscapes over time.
While contemporary life is structured by fast-moving human systems, transport networks, consumption cycles, and global supply chains, ecological processes unfold at a different pace. Seasonal transitions, plant growth, and changing weather conditions form a quieter temporal framework that often goes unnoticed in everyday life.
By revisiting the same view throughout the year, this project highlights the contrast between these temporalities and encourages closer attention to the environmental contexts that surround daily life.
The series forms part of Borderless Roots, an ongoing visual exploration of how environmental systems appear in everyday landscapes. Through photography and observation, the project examines how local places are connected to broader ecological processes and policy frameworks that shape how land, resources, and environments are managed.









