System Clock — Pulse of Consumption explores the choreography of urban consumption not as isolated street moments, but as a structural condition that quietly shapes how bodies move, behave, and relate to one another in public space.
Shot in European city environments, the series traces how architecture, branding, flow control, aspiration and invisible labor interlock to create a continuous pulse: a system in which desire, waiting, distraction and exhaustion coexist.
Rather than documenting events, the work observes thresholds, where human presence becomes entangled with larger forces – economic rhythms, social expectations, and the silent mechanics of visibility and exclusion.
The photographs move between clarity and blur, order and tension, visibility and disappearance. What interests me is not spectacle, but the subtle pressure of systems on everyday life – moments where individuality remains present, yet is constantly negotiated within the structures that frame it.