Toronto Fronts
These photographs document the street-level identity of Toronto neighbourhoods, capturing the flattened planes and shifting layers that define the city’s everyday character.
The work centers on the texture and lifeblood of the urban landscape, focusing on the beauty found in the mundane. These are storefronts and entrances in transition—spaces where windows may be covered or repurposed, revealing the fabric of a living, resilient city. By framing these façades as singular, monolithic subjects, the photographs examine the human presence etched into the architecture, offering a sense of quiet nostalgia and the persistent character of city life.
This series emphasizes the accumulation of detail on the urban surface: the weathered signage, the utilitarian glass, and the unintended compositions found in the city’s margins. It is a study of the enduring beauty found in the unremarkable and the steady, and of the resonant energy of a landscape in constant, quiet flux.