Windows

A series of photographs taken through a train window using a mobile phone captures fleeting moments of the world rushing by—a landscape in motion. The images reveal sunlit fields stretching to the horizon, towns that blend into the countryside, and forests that flicker with the golden light of late afternoon. Each shot is slightly blurred, as if to remind us of the speed at which life moves, and how easily it slips by unnoticed.

In the foreground, the reflection of the photographer’s phone screen hints at the irony of the scene: the very device used to capture the images is often the same one that distracts us from them. The colors in the photos are rich, yet there’s a certain melancholy to them, a reminder of all the beauty that goes unseen as we scroll through our feeds or check our notifications.

This series tells a story of disconnect—how we’ve become so absorbed in our digital lives that we often forget to look up and truly see the world around us. The images are both a celebration of the real, tangible world and a gentle plea: put your phone down, if only for a moment, and let yourself be captivated by the scenery outside your window.

In these photographs, the train window becomes a frame for life’s unnoticed moments, a visual reminder that the world outside is more vivid and more alive than anything on a screen. The phone’s reflection in the glass serves as a metaphor, urging us to break free from our digital bubbles and engage with the beauty that is right in front of us, waiting to be seen.