Traces of Everyday Life

What draws me to documentary photography is its ability to uncover quiet truths – the kind that often go unnoticed in the rush of daily life. While photographing in Lithuania, I wasn’t searching for the dramatic or the spectacular. Instead, I found meaning in subtle gestures, fleeting expressions, and the quiet rhythm of public and private spaces. These moments – often overlooked – began to form a portrait of contemporary Lithuania that felt both deeply personal and broadly resonant.

I focused on what I encountered in everyday life: people waiting, passing, pausing – moments suspended between movement and stillness. I wasn’t looking to stage or direct but to notice. The portraits are not just about faces, but about what’s felt in a glance, a posture, a presence. The urban landscapes are spaces I wandered through repeatedly – places that slowly revealed themselves not as backdrops, but as living environments marked by change, memory, and routine.

This work became a way for me to reflect on how personal experience and public space intersect. I hope viewers can find their own rhythm in these images – a kind of visual melody that emerges from the ordinary, where history, emotion, and the everyday quietly overlap.

Damian Chrobak

Damian Chrobak (born in 1977 in Jastrzębie-Zdrój, Poland) is a documentary photographer whose work explores the subtle rhythms of everyday life in public spaces. His practice spans cities like Warsaw, London, New York, Kaunas, and other locations, capturing spontaneous street moments that reflect both local culture and universal human behaviors.

Blending seriousness with quiet humor, Chrobak’s photographs transform ordinary encounters into layered narratives. His images function as visual notes – standalone records that invite personal interpretation and reveal the cultural textures of the environments that he moves through.

After studying at the Warsaw Academy of Photography, Chrobak moved to London in 2004, continuing his education at the University of the Arts London and the Institute of Creative Photography in Opava, Czech Republic. In 2010, he joined the Polish Association of Visual Artists and founded Un-Posed, a street photography collective focused on candid, unfiltered visual storytelling.

Chrobak’s work has been widely published across the UK, New Zealand, the US, Germany, Poland, and other European countries. He is currently based in Kaunas, Lithuania, where he continues to expand his archive and explore the everyday through his lens.