P.S. Nothing Personal explores how identity is shaped, performed, and consumed in the digital age. We encounter an endless stream of images online, but more images do not bring more truth. Instead, identity becomes curated and fragmented, constructed for visibility and for the gaze of others.
Working with models, I create staged portraits that combine my visual language with their self-presentation. The images exist between authenticity and performance, where the personal and the public overlap and the real becomes inseparable from its representation.
The project reflects on contemporary portraiture as a space of negotiation, where identity is continuously edited, displayed, and reinterpreted rather than revealed.
















