No Evidence of Disease explores the intersection of trauma, landscape, and the body, capturing how overlooked histories and narratives are embedded in both land and body. Landscapes can serve as silent witnesses to forgotten violences and past injustices. Through photography, these sites of memory are revealed, showing how trauma lingers in the environment, often unseen but ever-present.
Additionally, chronic illness often stems from unresolved trauma, manifesting
physically as a response to emotional or environmental stress. In this project, my body becomes a landscape. Photographs of the body reflect its ongoing battle with pain, resilience, and the echoes of trauma carried across generations. For those living with chronic illness, the struggles they endure are not always visible to others, which can lead to feelings of invalidation, or disconnection. Photographs provide an opportunity to externalize these experiences, transforming them into something tangible that can be
shared and understood.
Through the combined images of landscape and body, this project highlights the interconnectedness of seemingly separate spaces. Trauma moves across boundaries and shapes both the land and the individuals who inhabit it. The aim of this project is to make visible previously hidden histories and propose alternative futures of healing through photography, inviting new ways of engaging with the past and its ongoing impact on the present.