Disappearing Reality is not a series about fog.
It is a photographic inquiry into the moment when reality stops responding as expected – when urban space remains visible, but certainty collapses. The images describe environments that should offer orientation, yet fail to do so. What we see are not dramatic events, but a slow erosion of clarity: structures that dissolve, directions that no longer guide, paths that lead into indeterminate space.
The work reflects a psychological condition rather than a meteorological phenomenon. It deals with the fragility of perception, with the point at which the world becomes unreadable while still being present. These photographs explore that threshold – between comprehension and disorientation, presence and disappearance – where reality does not vanish, but withdraws from assurance.
In this sense, the series is not about losing the world outside, but about losing confidence in the act of seeing itself.