I have been totally excited by pictures ever since I can remember. The framed world, the various colors of a human being, the different ways of storytelling and the life of the photographers have always amazed me. Still, it took me a long time to arrive at photography and photojournalism. I started my career as a director’s assistant in the Budapest Operetta Theater, and I had spent almost six year in the business until I realized that I needed new ways to find myself. I started Budapest University of  Film and Drama in 2001, graduating as a production manager in 2003. The strong visual surroundings turned my interest to photography. Over the school years I grew more and more certain that this was the true way of expressing myself. In 2005, I bought my first semi-professional camera, a Nikon F65, and started to take photos for myself. In 2006, I applied for the Cirius scholarship in Denmark, and I spent almost eight months at the International People's College, where I was concentrating on photography. My teacher, Juan Carlos Albuquerque – a traveling photographer – taught me one of the most important things in photography: use your own “language” for taking images, and be original. Not only in the choice of themes, but in the way of taking photos. This was the place, where I finally decided to give up my professional film career and become a photojournalist. In 2008, I got accepted to Balint Gyorgy Acedemy of Journalism, and graduated as a photojournalist in 2009. I spent a half-a-year internship at the Hungarian National News Agency. Curretnly I am working as a freelance photojournalist for Red Dot Photo Agency covering Eastern Europe.

My main interest is daily life and people behind the news. This is the heritage of my strong visual past. Just frame the world.