I am a photojournalist and storyteller whose career spans more than five decades, beginning with thirty years documenting lives and conflicts abroad. Working internationally shaped my disciplined field practice and sharpened a comparative lens through which I studied power, identity, and belonging across cultures.
In 2015, I turned that globally informed eye toward his own country, embarking on what became The In Search of America Project—a multi-year exploration of the people and fault lines shaping the United States in the twenty-first century. Driving over 350,000 miles, I have documented Americans across political, geographic, and economic divides, focusing on dignity, freedom, and the universal desire to be heard.
My work functions both as contemporary moral inquiry and as a historical record—capturing America not as abstraction, but as lived experience. Through lectures, exhibitions, and field collaborations, I invite audiences to reconsider division not as the disease, but as the symptom of deeper human needs.
