Description
LOSTFRAME begins with a real journey and is re-experienced inside a digital world.
Each piece in this collection was first a real photograph,
a record of a moment seen, felt, and lived.
The journey starts on the road, where light, sound, and wind still exist,
and in its middle it moves through people, architecture, food, connections,
and everyday moments, searching for meanings
that slowly get lost in the crowd of data.
In the end, there is a kind of return
not to the same place, but to a fading image of it.
This collection is about the things that are quietly being erased from daily life:
human relationships, lights that once felt ordinary,
buildings we barely looked at,
meals whose taste remains in memory while their image disappears.
These works are born from real photographs,
but in the process of becoming data, they have lost part of themselves.
In their transformation into digital images, they have been altered,
distorted, glitched, and partially erased
just as our real experiences today
gradually lose their clarity beneath layers of recording and information.
Each image in this collection is both a document of a past reality
and a sign of that reality being erased in the present.
LOSTFRAME is a travelogue, it has a beginning, a middle, and an end.
It starts on the road, enters the city and everyday life,
and finally reaches a point where even the image itself
can barely remember what it once was.
This work is about the tension between memory and erasure,
an attempt to recall what can no longer truly be felt:
small joys, human glances, the color of food,
and landscapes that disappear in silence.
The digital world allows us to record everything,
yet in doing so, it often takes away the feeling of actually living it.
In the midst of this contradiction, LOSTFRAME is a visual travelogue
that tries to hold on to the things that slip from memory.
Perhaps recording is the last way we still know how to touch..