There is a quiet, heavy transition that happens when a season of prayer ends. The same figures that were once the heart of a home—objects that were spoken to, cared for, and treated as living anchors of faith—are suddenly moved. They are lifted from their altars to make way for what comes next, beginning a silent journey from the center of a life to the edge of it.
This project follows these icons as they settle into their new, unintended homes. You find them tucked under the roots of ancient trees, leaning against rusted city fences, or resting in the dirt beside the discarded remnants of the everyday. In these spaces, the line between the sacred and the ordinary disappears. A framed deity sits beneath the weight of damp laundry, and a weathered Buddha finds a final spot of meditation next to broken plumbing.
"No Longer Revered" is an intimate look at this parting. It isn't just about the objects themselves, but the visible space between deep devotion and eventual letting go. It captures the moment where the eternal meets the fragile, showing how these symbols of the divine slowly, and often beautifully, fade back into the landscape of the world.