I was born in Tunis in 1970, and I still live here. My father put a camera in my hands when I was a child, and something stayed. Not a vocation — more a way of looking at things, of staying with them a little longer than necessary.
I work as an art director and graphic designer, and I've made my career there. Photography has always been something else — a quieter place, kept aside, that I come back to when I need to. No client, no brief. Only what I want to see.
I photograph people, mostly. Sometimes a portrait I've prepared, sometimes a scene that simply happened in front of me. What I look for is the moment someone forgets they're being seen — when the face softens, when attention drifts elsewhere. That's usually when the image arrives.
I've recently spent time with Chénéb, a well digger who has been doing the same work for fifty years, and travelled in northern Kenya among the Turkana and Samburu. Both series are part of an ongoing attempt to photograph people without taking anything from them.
I received the Jury's Special Mention at the Maghreb Photography Competition for a self-portrait, and have shown work in group exhibitions in Tunis.
If you'd like to work together — on an editorial piece, a documentary commission, or something longer — write to me.