About the Work I found this stack of laundry detergent boxes in an ordinary neighborhood store. What caught my attention wasn’t the product itself, but the repetition, the typography, and the intensity of the colors. For a moment, the shelves stopped looking like a supermarket display and became an abstract composition. I’m interested in these moments when everyday objects lose their practical meaning and begin to exist simply as shapes, rhythm, and color.
Artist’s Process I don’t create pop-art photographs—I discover them. My work begins with observation. I look for visual compositions that already exist in everyday life, waiting to be noticed. Instead of rearranging objects or building scenes, I isolate fragments of reality that reveal unexpected graphic qualities. Photography allows me to preserve these accidental compositions exactly as I found them.
Series This work is part of my ongoing exploration of pop aesthetics through photography. I’m fascinated by the bold visual language hidden in ordinary places—commercial packaging, typography, repetition, and color. By changing nothing except the way I frame them, familiar objects become photographs that exist somewhere between documentation, graphic design, and pop art.