What is femininity?
Is it appearance or feeling, a feature of the body or a state of mind? Is it defined by the body itself, social expectations, or the viewer’s gaze?
Her Gaze at That looks on femininity as something fluid rather than fixed, shifting with perception, context, and personal experience. The work reflects on how it can be shaped, questioned, or taken away through visibility, bodily form, and cultural signs. Functioning both as a series and as an ongoing inquiry, the project shapes my approach to portraiture, using photography as a space of exploration where meaning remains open, layered, and unsettled.



































