In Transit: Faces of New York is a visual tribute to the pulse of New York City
and a witness to the times, showcasing fleeting, unposed and authentic moments
of humanity within its Subway’s iconic urban space, using an iPhone
—a tool as accessible and ubiquitous as the subjects themselves. 

For over a decade, I have photographed New Yorkers on the subway.
My approach is silent and unposed: passengers are caught in fleeting moments
of solitude, intimacy, exhaustion, humor, or simple presence. These images
are fragments of a larger mosaic — the living portrait of a city always in motion.

The subway is one of the few places where every kind of person converges.
For a few stops, strangers from different worlds share the same space,
the same rhythm. These photographs are not staged or directed.
They are glimpses of humanity in transit — small truths that together
become a collective portrait of New York.

The grid installation echoes the experience of sitting in a subway car:
shoulder to shoulder, image to image, as if we are all traveling together.
Up close, each face is its own universe. From a distance,
they become the city’s pulse — crowded, eclectic, alive.