Paris In Motion
2023
Paris in Motion is a visual exploration of a metropolis that never stops moving. The project focuses on the ceaseless flow of people, the iconic landmarks they pass, and the fragile, fleeting moments that connect them. Paris is presented not as a postcard, but as a living organism – constantly shifting, dissolving, reforming.
They captures an intersection of human presence and architectural history. Crowds surge through famous spaces like the Louvre, the Eiffel Tower, and the boulevards, creating scenes that exist for only a second before disappearing forever. These images highlight not only physical movement but also the emotional and temporal fragility of modern urban life. A moment vanishes, a composition collapses, and the city keeps breathing.
The project holds people and monuments on equal footing: one represents the present, the other centuries of the past. Together, they create a tension that defines Paris as both an eternal city and a place where everything is transient.
BEHIND THE PROJECT
This section offers a little context to help understand the images and the ideas behind the project. It explains how the work was created, what it explores, and what you might notice when looking closely.
Project Philosophy
This project began with a question: What makes Paris recognizable?
The answer became clear – its artworks and people around them.
The enormous flow of visitors and locals brings Paris to life, yet it also exposes something unsettling about our small, overcrowded planet. We stand before masterpieces that took decades to create, but we often engage with them for only a few seconds – just long enough to take a selfie. The photographs reflect this contradiction: admiration and distraction, presence and absence, beauty and chaos.
By observing crowds as they move through sacred artistic spaces, the work becomes a mirror. It quietly asks: Are we truly appreciating what we came here to see? Or are we only consuming it for a passing moment of digital approval?
Through these images, Paris becomes a stage where humanity’s habits, desires, and contradictions perform openly.
Personal View
I often think about the contrast between life in the city and life in the countryside. They are completely different worlds, yet each has its own beauty. When I visited Paris, I tried to move with the city – to let its rhythm carry me instead of fighting against the rush. I had to speed up to match its energy, and to be honest, it felt both tiring and chaotic. But it was also strangely enjoyable.
Being surrounded by so many people reminded me how important it is to slow down, to look at each other, and to actually see the world around us. A bit more gentleness toward ourselves, toward others, and toward the spaces we share, could make our cities more livable and our lives more meaningful. Even in a place as fast and overwhelming as Paris, there is room for stillness, if we allow ourselves to find it.
Documenting
Photographed between 24 and 26 December 2023 in Paris.
Tools and Methods
Captured with the Sony A7IV, with Sigma 14-24 f2.8 Art and Tamron 35-150 f2-2.2 Di iii VXD zoom lens,.
Black and White Editing
The choice of black and white removes the distractions of color and places the viewer inside the structure of the scene – light, shadow, geometry, and movement.
It fits this theme because it removes the “tourist postcard” look and replaces it with something raw, timeless, and honest.
Added Grain
Grain emphasizes texture, imperfection, and the documentary nature of the project. It gives the images a tactile feeling – like memories developing on film, or like the dust and noise of a busy city settling onto the frame.
High Contrast
The strong contrast reflects the emotional extremes of a metropolis: chaos and calm, anonymity and presence, history and modernity. It also heightens the drama of each captured moment.
Motion Blur & Slow Shutter Speeds
Movement is not only shown, it is felt.
By using slow shutter and intentional camera motion, the photographs express the instability of each moment. The blur becomes a visual metaphor for how quickly scenes dissolve in a crowded city. Nothing stays still, not even art.
Framing, Decomposition & Perspective
Many images are framed from the viewpoint of a participant rather than an observer. You place yourself inside the crowd, letting the viewer feel the same confusion, smallness, and overwhelming energy.
The decomposed compositions – where elements blur, overlap, or partially disappear – add a sense of disorientation and emotional intensity. It’s a “weird” feeling on purpose: it reflects how modern people experience iconic places today, often rushed, chaotic, or distracted.
Sometimes the framing shows the city from beneath, behind, or within the masses – reinforcing the idea that the photographer is part of the crowd, not separate from it. This is especially powerful in scenes where people rush toward major artworks like the Mona Lisa.
