Sense of Self Book

$30.00
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52 Pages | 7.5×10.5 | Published by Sunnyside Projects and printed by Conveyor Studio. First Edition of 40.

Designed by Milkglass to accompany the full gallery show on 4/11/26.

Sense of Self is a five-year exploration of my personal journey through EMDR therapy and the body’s ability to hold, process, and release. The work looks at how memory, especially when it’s fragmented or repressed, continues to live within us, showing up in the body through tension, sensation, and instinct. Emotions often settle into physical places: grief in the throat, anger in the back or legs, fear in the stomach or across the face. Whether we consciously remember their origins or not, these imprints shape how we move through the world. I wanted the photographs in this series to reflect that same sensation: soft, blurred moments that mimic the side-to-side rhythm of the eyes; portraits that feel slightly out of focus and fleeting, like fragments of a memory you can almost grasp but cannot fully recall. This work asks what it might mean to stay with that, to listen, and to gently begin to let go.

52 Pages | 7.5×10.5 | Published by Sunnyside Projects and printed by Conveyor Studio. First Edition of 40.

Designed by Milkglass to accompany the full gallery show on 4/11/26.

Sense of Self is a five-year exploration of my personal journey through EMDR therapy and the body’s ability to hold, process, and release. The work looks at how memory, especially when it’s fragmented or repressed, continues to live within us, showing up in the body through tension, sensation, and instinct. Emotions often settle into physical places: grief in the throat, anger in the back or legs, fear in the stomach or across the face. Whether we consciously remember their origins or not, these imprints shape how we move through the world. I wanted the photographs in this series to reflect that same sensation: soft, blurred moments that mimic the side-to-side rhythm of the eyes; portraits that feel slightly out of focus and fleeting, like fragments of a memory you can almost grasp but cannot fully recall. This work asks what it might mean to stay with that, to listen, and to gently begin to let go.