I publish most of my photojournalism on Instagram as soon as the photos are ready. Below are some examples of my photojournalism work in 2024. Feel free to find me on Instagram for more photos, including a lot of travel photography.
This page was last updated on 29 July 2025. Find more recent photos here.
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Borders define the contemporary world. Every day, hundreds of millions of people are on the move; many involuntarily. Stark inequalities and the relative success of some places drive desperate minds to search for a future that is less painful. They come up against barriers, physical realities carved through the desert to stop them in their tracks and turn them from human into statistic. Countless others pass with no problem because their fortunes fell differently.
The Wastebasket of History
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A truly special experience.
Almost 1000 kilometers of driving, four new Texan cities seen, and insistently hoping the clouds would part until the very last moment led to an unforgettable 4 minutes, 28 seconds in totality in Eclipseville (Gatesville).
How cool is it that we also got to see sun spots and flares?
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Monterey car week is serious business – except at Concours d’Lemons. While elsewhere on the peninsula, the most expensive, exquisite cars are presented, here — on the lawn of the City of Seaside’s town Hall — the vehicles compete to be the worst, most absurd or mundane. Categories like “should have been in a lawsuit” and “worst of show” are rewarded with a fire extinguisher, cans of soup, lemons and similar valuable prizes. Ultimately, though, it may be the car owners who have the last laugh: For they will forever be winners of a Monterey Car Week award.
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The San Andreas Fault is responsible for California’s worst earthquakes. Both the 1906 earthquake that fully destroyed San Francisco and the 1989 Loma Prieta quake that collapsed part of the Bay Bridge came from here. The fault – a visible line in the ground – stretches all the way from southern California to the Bay Area before it enters the ocean. It’s where the North American and Pacific tectonic plates meet. These plates move in opposite directions, laterally past each other at up to 7 cm a year (and more in major earthquakes). This movement means that things that cross the fault line get split and dragged in opposite directions – like Wallace Creek, pictured in some of these drone shots. Infrastructure like roads, pipelines and power lines also needs to account for this movement.
Earth temporarily had a cosmic companion in the form of an only recently discovered comet.
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Пролетарский рай?