Franco-Bangladeshi documentary photographer and filmmaker based in Paris.

I document lives that resist, that root themselves, that claim their place in the world. My work focuses on women, children, and invisibilized communities, those whose stories shape our societies without ever occupying their center. Grounded in two cultures and two languages, I work through immersion and trust, convinced that proximity is the condition of honesty.

Recent work:
“Men’s world (the invisible half)”

In public space, presence is not neutral. It is negotiated, assigned, inherited. In the towns of Rangpur (Bangladesh), the street is a male territory, not by law, but by practice, by repetition, by the weight of what is considered natural. Men sit in doorways, wait beside their rickshaws, repair, trade, watch. They occupy the open air with ease, with stillness, with ownership.

Women move differently through the same space. Covered, contained, always in transit. They appear at the edge of the frame, inside a vehicle, crossing a street, never lingering. Their presence is real but provisional, tolerated rather than claimed. To photograph the street in Rangpur is to photograph a world that has quietly, systematically, organised itself around male visibility.

And yet women are there. Always present, but almost invisible.

On-going projects

Là-bas est ici

France
2026

Là-bas est ici is a photographic and ethnographic project documenting the lives of first-generation immigrant mothers in France. The home as a site of transmission, the mother as its driving force: through portraits made inside their homes and in-depth interviews, the project observes how these women build a sense of home between two worlds, their relationship to their mother tongue, to cultural traditions, to everyday gestures, and the ways they pass their heritage on to their children. The work will be published as a book combining photographs and firsthand testimonies.

The girls left behind

Rangpur, Bangladesh
2026

The girls left behind is a documentary photography project rooted in Rangpur, Bangladesh, where 58% of girls marry before 18 and hundreds of thousands of children work as domestic servants, the majority of them girls.

Born there, I left at five. I return to document what the lottery of birth decided for those who stayed. This ongoing project restores their voice and their power to act, refusing any victimizing posture.

The unsinkable
Documentary film

Saint-martin, Bangladesh
2026

On Bangladesh's only coral island, saltwater intrusion is poisoning freshwater sources and causing gynecological diseases among women. Caught between rising sea levels and the ongoing Myanmar border conflict, Saint Martin Island is disappearing, predicted extinct by 2045.

This documentary follows young women who continue to live, hope, and resist in a territory the world has already begun to erase.