Daily image project 

A collective photographic experiment developed over the course of one year.

Three hundred and sixty-five days, four authors, and a shared attempt to transform everyday observations into a single visual narrative.

About this project

Daily Image Project is a collaborative photographic experiment developed over the course of 365 consecutive days.

Created by four students of the Academy of Fine Arts, the project originated from a simple question: what happens when the compulsive act of photographing is given a structure and a duration? Each participant committed to producing and sharing images daily, without predefined themes or narrative constraints.

The resulting archive became a collection of fragments drawn from everyday life—objects, interiors, landscapes, people, memories and fleeting encounters. Individually, the photographs appear disconnected. Together, they begin to generate unexpected relationships, revealing visual echoes, recurring forms and shared emotional territories.

Rather than documenting a specific place or event, the project constructs a collective portrait shaped by multiple perspectives. Images produced by different authors merge into a single visual environment where personal experiences overlap and boundaries between individual narratives gradually dissolve.

Daily Image Project explores photography as a tool for observation, accumulation and connection, transforming ordinary moments into a broader reflection on memory, presence and the ways images communicate with one another.