About Lenzabove

Welcome to Lenzabove, a visual art project exploring the silent language of landscapes from above. Discover the inspiration, philosophy, and unique perspective that define our cinematic aerial photography and abstract studies.

Our inspiration: A new perspective on familiar landscapes

Lenzabove began from a desire to look at familiar landscapes differently. I was drawn to the idea that places we pass every day contain layers of structure, movement, and pattern that often go unnoticed until you remove yourself from ground level.

From the air, those details start to form a different kind of language — not of specific locations, but of rhythm, texture, and atmosphere. That shift in perspective is what first inspired the work and continues to drive it.

Beyond the moment: Exploring natural processes

I’m inspired by natural processes rather than single moments: the way tides reshape sand, how fields are divided and repeated, how light changes structure over time. These elements are always present, but never static.

Lenzabove is my way of exploring those quiet systems and presenting them as visual studies rather than traditional landscape photography — more about feeling and form than place or documentation.

The message: Slow down and see anew

I hope the work encourages people to slow down and look at familiar landscapes in a different way. Rather than focusing on place or recognition, I want the images to highlight rhythm, structure, and the quiet systems that shape the natural world.

The main idea behind the work is that landscapes are constantly in motion — even when they appear still. Tides, light, erosion, and human patterns all overlap to create forms that feel almost abstract when viewed from above. If there’s a message, it’s that beauty doesn’t always come from dramatic moments. It often exists in repetition, subtle change, and the patterns we overlook when we’re too close to them.

"What makes Lenzabove different is the way the work moves between observation and abstraction without forcing either direction. It begins with real landscapes, but the focus is never on documenting them in a traditional sense."

Gavin Peskett, Founder of Lenzabove