Family portraiture is not one thing.
It begins with a newborn held against a parent’s chest and grows through babyhood, childhood, sibling bonds, parent-child relationships, and the quiet presence of grandparents. This portfolio brings those chapters together as I photograph them in my Johannesburg studio — with restraint, emotional truth, and deep respect for the golden thread that runs through family life.
These are not portraits built around performance. They are portraits of presence — of who belonged to whom, who leaned in, who held on, and how love looked at a particular moment in time.
Some family portraits begin at the very start.
A newborn held close. A baby still soft with first-year wonder. The earliest chapters are often the most fleeting, which is why they carry such emotional weight. These portraits honour the beginning — the first arrivals, the first bonds, and the first shifts in what a family becomes.
As children grow, the shape of family changes, but the bond remains.
This part of the work is about the distinct emotional language between parent and child — the tenderness between a mother and daughter, the quiet depth of mother and son portraits, and the strength and softness that often live side by side in father-and-child portraits.
These sessions are less about performance and more about connection. They hold relationship, familiarity, and the kinds of gestures that matter more with time.
→ View mother & daughter portraits
→ View father & child portraits
Not every portrait fits neatly into a single label.
Some family stories are held in sibling connection, the presence of grandparents, or the quieter dynamics of a child photographed within a wider family circle. These portraits belong here too. They remind us that family is not defined only by category, but by closeness, memory, and the roles people play in one another’s lives.
This is where the work opens out — from the earliest beginnings to the broader relationships that give family its depth.
Family portraits change in value over time.
What feels familiar now will one day feel irreplaceable. The way a child leans into a parent. The expression on a grandparent’s face. The closeness between siblings at one particular age. These things rarely announce themselves as important in the moment, yet they become part of the visual history a family returns to again and again.
That is why I photograph families simply.
So the emotion stays clear.
So the portraits endure.
So the people in them stay at the centre of the frame, where they belong.
If you are drawn to family portraits shaped by connection, presence, and the quiet weight of what family means over time, you can read more about the experience here.
→ View the family portrait experience