Drawn to the atmosphere surrounding racing, I document the movement, tension, and fleeting moments that often go unnoticed.

  • The 24 Hours of Lemons is a low-budget endurance racing series where teams compete in inexpensive, often unusual cars over long-distance races that typically last around 14–24 hours. Known for its humor, creativity, and grassroots racing culture, the event combines amateur motorsports with costumes, themed builds, and a strong sense of community

  • A documentation of kart racing centered around Andrew Oki (#24), capturing the intensity, movement, and atmosphere surrounding the sport. Through close observation of both the driver and environment, this body of work explores the focus, discipline, and fleeting moments that define competitive racing culture.

  • Documenting IndyCar racing, a form of open-wheel motorsport powered by twin-turbocharged V6 engines capable of producing extreme speed across street circuits, road courses, and oval tracks. Designed with exposed wheels, aerodynamic bodywork, and high power-to-weight performance, these vehicles create a style of racing defined by close competition, technical control, and constant adaptation between vastly different track environments.

  • This body of work documents NASCAR Xfinity Series racing, a form of stock car motorsport centered around heavily modified production-based vehicles powered by naturally aspirated V8 engines. Racing across superspeedways, short tracks, and road courses, the series is defined by close-contact competition, mechanical endurance, and the balance between raw power and driver control.