Graveframe
Related Work
Graveframe exists alongside Unfortunate Cadaver as a separate but aligned practice.
Where Unfortunate Cadaver focuses on acquisition and preservation of objects, Graveframe is concerned with witness—the quiet documentation of spaces, remains, and structures shaped by time, neglect, and disappearance.
This work is not produced for spectacle. It is observational, deliberate, and restrained.
What Is Documented
Cemeteries and burial grounds
Roadside aftermaths and traces
Abandoned and decaying infrastructure
Objects and environments altered by weather, time, and human absence
Nothing is staged. Nothing is altered beyond the act of framing.
Relationship to Unfortunate Cadaver
Some objects curated through Unfortunate Cadaver were encountered during the same fieldwork that informs Graveframe. Others share the same philosophy: that age is not damage, and that preservation begins with attention.
The two practices remain intentionally distinct.
Graveframe documents.
Unfortunate Cadaver preserves and places.
They intersect through ethics, not commerce.
On Intent
Graveframe does not explain what should be felt.
It exists to record what remains when usefulness has ended—when something is no longer maintained, no longer protected, and no longer watched.
These images are offered without narrative demand.
Viewing the Work
Graveframe is presented as a photographic archive. Prints are available where appropriate, but the work itself is not built around availability.
For those who wish to view this body of work, it can be accessed below.
This page is provided as contextual reference for collectors and visitors seeking to understand the broader practice behind Unfortunate Cadaver.