My journey as a visual artist began as a personal exploration — a way to understand identity, expression, and the power of image.
What started as a creative outlet quickly evolved into something deeper when I began working with the queer community, capturing drag artists and individuals whose stories deserve to be seen and felt.
Through my lens, I found not only a visual language, but a purpose.
Today, my work is rooted in celebrating authenticity, transformation, and the freedom to exist beyond expectations.
Grevio Films is a space where art and identity meet — where every image becomes a statement of visibility, confidence, and self-expression.
WHAT IS GREVIO FILMS ?
Grevio Films is a visual exploration of identity, freedom, and self-expression through photography — a space where image becomes language, and presence becomes power.
It all began from something deeply personal.
The name Grevio was born from the union of my two daughters — a reflection of who I am first: a father.
Before photography became my voice, life had already begun reshaping me. Migrating to Canada marked a turning point — a moment of displacement, growth, and reinvention. In that space between who I was and who I was becoming, creativity became something essential.
Not just an outlet, but a way to reconnect.
A way to rebuild.
A way to understand myself again.
Photography started quietly.
Intimately.
As a need to hold onto something real while everything else was shifting.
That journey led me somewhere I didn’t expect.
Through my lens, I found myself drawn to the queer community — not from a place of distance, but from recognition. I saw honesty. I saw transformation. I saw people choosing themselves, fully and unapologetically.
And something in me understood that.
What began as curiosity quickly became connection.
What became connection turned into purpose.
I started photographing drag artists — not just as performers, but as creators of identity. As storytellers. As individuals who transform, redefine, and reclaim who they are.
In those moments, photography stopped being just about image.
It became about presence.
About vulnerability.
About power.
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