My ongoing creative research, Eager Terrain (working title), investigates the intended and unintended uses of urban parks and public green spaces, emphasizing their architectural and social dimensions. This project explores the intersection of spatial design, societal behavior, and individual identity, examining how designed environments influence and are influenced by their users. By adopting a photographic approach, I aim to document the evolving relationship between humans and public spaces, revealing the layered complexities and subtleties of our built environments.

Since its inception during my artist residency in Stuttgart, Germany, in 2017, Eager Terrain has expanded to include cities such as Los Angeles, Paris, and Berlin, as well as smaller urban centers. Against the backdrop of contemporary global challenges—including the COVID-19 pandemic, economic inequality, and climate change—this project examines the transformation of historical municipal parks and the emergence of new typologies of green spaces. By analyzing these transformations, my work seeks to contribute to ongoing dialogues in landscape architecture and urbanism, addressing questions of accessibility, placemaking, and the adaptive reuse of public spaces.

The visual methodology of Eager Terrain combines wide-angle compositions that contextualize individuals within vast urban landscapes with detailed studies of human interventions and traces within these spaces. This dual approach highlights both the solitude and the communal aspects of public parks, capturing how their use often diverges from the architect’s original intent. The layering of elements such as informal paths, temporary installations, and user-driven modifications illustrates the dynamic interplay between design and lived experience. These findings aim to provoke critical reflections on how public spaces are designed, appropriated, and redefined over time.

This project is grounded in interdisciplinary inquiry, bridging photography, architecture, and urban studies to engage with the socio-spatial dimensions of public green spaces. By situating my research within the broader context of architectural theory and urban planning, I aim to contribute to a deeper understanding of how public spaces foster well-being and community engagement. Additionally, this work addresses the role of transience and tourism in shaping urban green spaces, offering insights relevant to architects and planners navigating the complexities of contemporary urban life.

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Wig Heavier Than A Boot (2015 - 2023)