Fusion ー 
Where Japanese aesthetics quietly meet Australian landscapes

I began my journey into photography at the age of 24 while working as an international flight attendant. With a camera always in hand, the visual language of cities gradually unfolded — the geometry of Milan, the luminous glow of Paris, and the golden light of California — revealing a quiet dialogue between Japanese tradition and global aesthetics, reflected in shoji-inspired furniture, kimono-textile gowns, and tea house–style wine spaces.
The second chapter emerged on stage. As an event producer at a live venue within Tokyo Midtown — a cultural and commercial complex — I curated and collaborated across disciplines, from wedding design and floral art to wine dining with live performance, transforming those impressions into shared creative experiences.
Now, a third chapter begins within the natural landscapes of South Australia. Traces of dyeing, woven textures, and washi translucency appear subtly through the lens — a quiet journey of discovering Japanese aesthetics within raw environments.


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