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From Lens to Living Space: My NYC Photography Exhibition

After years behind the lens, there’s still something uniquely humbling about seeing your work live permanently in a space that breathes design and creativity.

My latest exhibition is now on display inside Muretti — an extraordinary interior design showroom located in Chelsea, New York (134 W 25th St). It’s a space where art meets architecture, and I’m honored to be part of it.

Getting the prints readyThis collaboration began just over a year ago. Muretti’s team was looking for an artist — someone whose work could blend seamlessly with their vision for high-end interior storytelling. I showed them my photography portfolio. They didn’t hesitate.

From there, their creative director hand-selected each piece, carefully curating a visual journey that complemented the aesthetic of the showroom through color, theme, and atmosphere. Blues to echo water. Monochromes to ground space. Earth tones to balance light.

Every image was then sent to WhiteWall in Germany, a trusted partner I’ve worked with for years, known for museum-grade printing and precision. After printing and framing, the works were delivered, assembled, and brought to life.

And now, here we are. It’s a permanent exhibition — a standing presence in the heart of New York.

 

The collection spans some of the most powerful and personal pieces I’ve captured: from glacial abstracts from Iceland to Aerial perspectives taken from helicopter flights over Alaska.

From Black and white street scenes of New York City and the Brooklyn Bridge to the Quiet minimalism from Montauk, where water and sky mirror each other like ink, and the hyper-color intensity of California, Arizona, and beyond.

Each photograph carries a memory — of cold wind against the lens, the rumble of a chopper above the mountains, the silence before sunrise in an empty desert.

Now, they hang in Chelsea — not just as images, but as design elements. As the atmosphere.

If you’re in New York, I invite you to visit Muretti at 134 W 25th St.
It’s not a gallery. It’s not a museum. It’s something more intimate — where art lives alongside design, and where stories live on walls.