At the Scale of the Mountain

At the Scale of the Mount

At the Scale of the Mountain

This project explores the relationship of scale between human beings and geography.

Much of modern life places humans at the center of the world. Cities, roads, buildings, and technologies are designed according to human scale, making the surrounding environment appear shaped primarily by human needs. In mountainous landscapes, however, this hierarchy is reversed. Human beings emerge as small presences within a spatial reality far greater than themselves.

Produced in the highlands surrounding Yüksekova, these photographs do not focus on humanity’s dominance over nature, but on its place within it. Human figures often appear diminished within the frame, sometimes nearly disappearing altogether. In contrast, mountains, valleys, horizons, and open skies become the dominant elements of the image.

This visual strategy is not intended to emphasize human insignificance, but rather to reconsider humanity’s place in the world. In this geography, life is not built upon the idea of controlling nature; instead, it unfolds through coexistence with it.

The roads, solitary structures, herds, and human bodies that appear throughout the photographs leave fragile yet enduring traces within vast landscapes. Places that may initially seem empty reveal themselves as spaces shaped by labor, continuity, and everyday life. Here, human beings appear less as agents of transformation and more as inhabitants adapting to the rhythms of the land.

The project also reflects on contemporary human-centered perceptions of the world. Bodies that diminish against the scale of mountains do not illustrate mastery over nature; they reveal a relationship of interdependence between humans and the earth.

The photographs revolve around a fundamental question:

How does a human being exist within a world that is vastly larger than themselves?

Rather than seeking answers through dramatic events or grand narratives, this project looks for them in quiet landscapes, long distances, solitary structures, and the overwhelming scale of the mountains.