Power
This portfolio examines landscapes shaped by power generation, from coal‑fired plants to the cooling towers of nuclear facilities. Photographed within expansive and often striking environments, these sites exist at the intersection of natural beauty and industrial necessity, where infrastructure rises quietly from fields, rivers, and forests. These places are products of political decisions, economic demands, and social agreements about progress, consumption, and risk. Their power generation becomes not only a technical process, but a cultural one embedded in land use, environmental cost, and collective dependence. The work considers these sites as critical touch points in the ongoing negotiation between development and conservation.