Geo Flowers explores active remembering, material investigation, and meditative mark-making. I’ve long been drawn to flowers—both as an artist and a collector of beautiful things. Printing them and retracing their topography through intuitive geometric marks, with no aim toward mathematical precision, became a way to reawaken the immediacy of what first moved me when I captured the image.
Every photograph is about death, and this feels especially true for flowers, whose beauty is so fleeting. Once captured, their memory begins to fade. Printing gives them a second body, a renewed life. Through this process of marking, I found a kind of time machine—one that lets me trace each petal and return, childlike, to that original moment of wonder.