
Fraction of Blue:
The Hidden
Keepers of the Sea
Dive into an unseen world where time moves in slow motion and life unfolds in mesmerizing detail.
Fraction of Blue invites you to experience a unique blend of music and photography. Discover original compositions and underwater visuals that will inspire and captivate your imagination.
It serves as both an artistic revelation and an ecological wake-up call, highlighting how the smallest marine creatures, often overlooked in conservation efforts, play indispensable roles in maintaining ocean health.
Tracks





More songs coming up...
This immersive underwater macro photography exhibition showcases the hidden narratives of marine life in Indonesia’s Tulamben coral reefs. The exhibition unveils the intricate behaviors and adaptations of rarely seen marine creatures, from camouflaged frogfish to Pygmy seahorses.
Through macro photography, we demonstrate how human impacts disrupt microscopic worlds with cascading consequences for the entire marine ecosystems.
Macro Photography


"Seaborne wind hums low and thin,
Tracing shores where tides have been.
Empty shells in moonlit rows
Silent clocks the ocean knows."





"Horizons warp where currents meet,
Drowning clocks in mercury heat.
Rusted, fractured, in the memory,
Gears still, turning, choked by entropy."


















Behind the Scenes


With the photos from the underwater experiences, I curated my first exhibition, “Fraction of Blue: The Hidden Keepers of the Sea,” in Connecticut, United States.
Showcasing from September 2025 through February 2026, the exhibition features 28 framed photos of marine life hung on the walls and in the hallways. While the photographs are large enough to catch attention from afar, it is only when they step closer that they discover the actual sizes of the marine life printed on the index cards. QR codes accompany the works, linking to a self-created online photo gallery featuring other themed photos of animals and ocean scenes, and self-composed song, “No Shore Thing,” that blends soothing piano, nature sound samples, and synthesizers as accompaniment.
Together, the exhibition serves as a wake-up call about the respect humans owe to these unnoticed beings playing indispensable roles in maintaining ocean health.

