
Net
A spread fishing net entangles and rises in layers of fine threads catching the light. Among the strands lie brown floats and a thick black rope — lines of order within random tangle. The photograph observes the moment after labor, when the material remains alone, revealing beauty in confusion and the quiet order born from the sea’s fatigue.

Joshua Rosalis
Joshua Rosalis (born 1975) Born in Tel Aviv, raised in Be’er Sheva. He earned his Bachelor’s degree at the College of Contemporary Music and Oklahoma City University, and his Master’s degree (MMC) from Oklahoma City University. A street and landscape photographer, Rosalis finds wonder in randomness and creates from an ongoing exploration of identity, memory, and the street and human landscape. His work draws inspiration from urban spaces and from the relationships between personal documentation and social reality. Through visual and textual media, he seeks to construct a space that allows dialogue between the inner and the outer, between aesthetics and critique.
Joshua Rosalis (born 1975) Born in Tel Aviv, raised in Be’er Sheva. He earned his Bachelor’s degree at the College of Contemporary Music and Oklahoma City University, and his Master’s degree (MMC) from Oklahoma City University. A street and landscape photographer, Rosalis finds wonder in randomness and creates from an ongoing exploration of identity, memory, and the street and human landscape. His work draws inspiration from urban spaces and from the relationships between personal documentation and social reality. Through visual and textual media, he seeks to construct a space that allows dialogue between the inner and the outer, between aesthetics and critique.