limited edition fine art photography
Photographic works made through presence rather than pursuit—animals and landscapes encountered quietly, without intervention.
Each image is produced as a limited edition, crafted for longevity and accompanied by a signed Certificate of Authenticity.
Flexible payment available through Afterpay, AFFIRM, and Klarna.
ICON COLLECTION
FINE ART AND EDITIONS
All works are produced as limited editions and accompanied by a numbered Certificate of Authenticity. Each piece is made with intention—honoring longevity, material integrity, and environmental responsibility.
Fine Art Prints
Printed on sustainable Hahnemühle archival paper, selected for its permanence and tonal depth. Each print includes a white border, allowing for stability and traditional matting.
Framed Works
Printed using responsibly sourced materials and mounted on sustainable wood substrates. Custom framing and finish options are available.
Publications
Books are produced on FSC-certified paper using plant-based inks, ensuring longevity while minimizing environmental impact.
Production & Delivery
All works are made to order.
• Books: up to 4 weeks
• Fine Art Prints: approximately 7 business days
• Framed Works: 4–6 weeks
made-to-order, sales are final.
Flexible payment available through Afterpay, Affirm, and Klarna.


In the wild, art is the language
These works are made through long observation—hours and days spent in the presence of animals as they move through their own time and terrain. Each photograph emerges from patience rather than pursuit, shaped by light, stillness, and restraint.
The images do not seek drama. They attend to presence—
the weight of a lion at dusk,
the held gaze of an elephant,
the fleeting passage of a leopard through shadow.
This is not wildlife as spectacle.
It is wildlife as form—ancient, self-possessed, and briefly revealed.
The Work
Each print is produced as a fine art edition, crafted to honor the integrity of the image and the moment from which it came. Materials are selected for permanence and tonal depth, allowing the work to live quietly within a space rather than dominate it.
These photographs are not souvenirs of place.
They are acts of attention—records of lives encountered, not taken.
Responsibility
A portion of each acquisition supports conservation and Indigenous-led initiatives across Africa. This commitment is embedded within the work itself, not appended to it.
To live with one of these images is to participate in stewardship—a shared responsibility toward what is pictured and what remains unseen.




























