
The Shape of Breathing
In The Shape of Breathing — Bodies as Structures, I photograph the human body not as identity or narrative, but as a living structure—an architecture that bends, supports, compresses, and resists. Breath is both subject and method: a quiet rhythm that continuously shifts volume, tension, and balance. Since a still image cannot show breathing directly, the work looks for its traces—the lift of the ribcage, the compression of the abdomen, the held strain just before release—to suggest a body that is alive, yet suspended.
The series grows from a long-term interest in how bodies occupy space. Instead of idealizing the nude, I approach it as construction: muscles like beams under load, joints like hinges, skin like a membrane responding to inner pressure. Intimacy here is not erotic intention, but proximity and attention. Faces are often removed and the body is cropped or fragmented to quiet biography, allowing form, texture, and spatial relationships to lead.
The visual language remains restrained. Light describes structure more than mood, and shadow functions like construction lines, carving depth. Softness becomes a kind of strength—vulnerability not as spectacle, but as a structural condition.
Hasselblad 500CM, ILFORD DELTA 400
FENG YAN, Netherlands, Amsterdam