Sketches from the Suburbs
In these drawings, there are delayed trains, routine gestures, tired faces, and bodies waiting. They are fragments of everyday life in the suburbs, captured without permission but with respect.
They are not idealized portraits. They are real fragments: the mother returning from work, the man alone in the square, the line at the bank, the chat on the corner. The ephemeral becomes drawing—a silent record of what often goes unnoticed.
To draw in the street is to look differently. And also, a way of being.

Life Drawing
These drawings are born from the silence of the studio, from measured time and a sustained gaze. They are studies drawn from life, with real models, real bodies, in sessions of continuous observation and line.
Drawing from life is not just training the hand; it is also an act of attention, of visual listening, of respect for the form and what inhabits it. Each line seeks to understand the body—without imposing on it.
There are mistakes, there are explorations, there are searches. But above all, there is presence. Because drawing—when it is honest—is also a way of being.
