Capital Daughters is a photographic long-term project portraying the Berlin woman of today.
It is a feminist time document and a homage to my generation. Women born in the 1990s and raised in a newly reunited city - a generation shaped by change, freedom and contradiction.
The Berlin woman is difficult to define. She is fearless and tender, ironic and sentimental, grounded and restless. Her story has always been one of emancipation. Capital Daughters continues this lineage, portraying women as sisters, friends and mothers whose lives and relationships actively shape the cultural and emotional landscape of the city.
Moving between documentary and staged photography, the project explores female presence in private and public spaces, in moments of stillness and movement.
Bedrooms, streets and in-between places become stages for intimacy, resilience and connection.
Each portrait becomes an encounter - with a woman, with Berlin, and with my own biography as a native of the city.
Capital Daughters is a search for origin and belonging.
A reflection on the intimate bond between women — and on how the places we come from remain visible within us.