Fine Art Photography
Stillness, Light, and AtmosphereMy photographs explore the quiet relationship between light, form, and atmosphere — moments where stillness allows the ordinary to come into view.
About the Artist
Adri is a Canadian fine art photographer whose work brings together painterly composition, minimal abstraction, and a quiet emotional presence. Raised between Belgium, the Netherlands, and Canada, her visual language is shaped by both classical structure and the subtle textures of everyday life.
Her relationship with photography began early, and over time became a steady creative thread. She later returned to it more intentionally during a period of personal change, drawn to its ability to hold quiet attention and presence.
Today, Adri’s lens continues to return to familiar botanical forms, observing how they shift with time and light. Like Monet’s lifelong study of his garden, this repetition is not about sameness, but deepening — a way of seeing more.
Gallery
Images that offer rest, reflection, and beauty.
Welcome to my fine art photography work inspired by slow mornings, soft light, and the moments that asked me to pause. I photograph intuitively — drawn by mood, memory, and whatever the season is offering. Each image is a quiet invitation: to notice more, breathe deeper, and find stillness tucked into the everyday.
How I See
My photographs often begin in the quiet — seeing dappled light in a new way, or exploring deep shadows. I move slowly, pausing, led by intuition, noticing what’s already there. A curl of a petal, along the curve of a mug — a moment that offers more as I explore it more deeply.
My goal is to listen with my lens — to stillness, to subtle shifts, to something just beneath the surface. A story starts to emerge in the frame — in what wants to be seen, or what doesn’t.
Later, I spend time with each image, shaping it until it holds what I felt in that moment. Many of my pieces are close, quiet, sometimes abstract — invitations to pause, to soften, to see a little differently.
This practice took root gradually — not as a project, but as a way to find ground again. Over time, others began to respond — to the calm, the clarity, the space. And so I kept going.
Each piece is part of an ongoing conversation — with the natural world, with beauty, and with the quiet resilience we carry.
If this way of noticing resonates with your work or environment, I’d love to continue the conversation.