I spend time in silent, wild nature – mainly in Africa.
In wide, open landscapes that are not made for consumption, but for presence.
My work does not come from fast safaris or from the search for the spectacular moment.
It comes from staying. From observing. From keeping a respectful distance to what is alive. Out of simply being.
With my photography, I want to:
Make wilderness visible without simplifying it. Create closeness without taking anything away.
And I want to open spaces for attention, patience, and responsibility.
This work is closely connected to my travels.
To truly understand animals, landscapes, and ecological relationships, I return again and again.
Deep Silent Wild is therefore also a cycle. My photographs help finance my journeys and allow me to support conservation directly. These journeys deepen my understanding and my relationship with wilderness. From this depth, I try to contribute to protection in a concrete way – through financial support, through long-term involvement, and through a way of showing wildlife that is based on respect, not exploitation.
Through my work, I want to show that protection does not grow from distance, but from understanding, connection, and responsibility.
Deep Silent Wild stands for a quiet, honest engagement with wilderness –
and for the decision not only to show it, but to protect it.
