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by Editor: Marius Cinteza
Edited and published by Yvette Depaepe, the 6th of March 2026
In a contemporary era often defined by digital noise, rapid-fire consumption, and a growing sense of "compassion fatigue", the work of Raluca Arhire, a conceptual, fine art photographer and portraitist based in Romania, serves as a necessary sanctuary. Her artistic mission is not merely to capture a physical likeness but to create safe, dignified spaces where vulnerability is honored rather than exposed. She seeks to move beyond the superficial goal of entertainment, aiming instead to ensure her viewers feel seen, recognized, and introspective.
For Raluca, photography is a profound form of self-exploration, a fantastic journey into the essence of a personality that might otherwise remain artfully hidden from the conscious self. In her world, the photograph is that final, revealing layer. She is also a 1x ambassador and in this role she serves as a bridge to a global community defined by more than just art and images.
‘Silence’
For Raluca, creativity is not a professional switch that can be toggled; it is a constant state of being. She describes herself as a "vivid collector of emotions," one who finds poetry in the smallest, often overlooked details of existence: the specific arc of a bird’s flight, the rhythmic pattern of a highway's sound, or the fleeting, ghost-like shadow a butterfly cast upon the skin. Her creative practice is deeply rooted in an almost meditative form of sensory awareness.
To better understand the essence of her surroundings and the simplicity of nature, she once engaged in a personal experiment where she remained blindfolded in her house for an entire day. By silencing her sight, she became hyper-aware of textures, smells, and sounds, learning to perceive the world through a lens of purity. This pursuit of the "essence of things" is also reflected in her relationship with her dogs, with whom she has developed a wordless communication that transcends verbal boundaries, providing a sense of grounding and joy.
‘The last embrace’
Her entry into the world of art was not marked by a single, dramatic event, but by a quiet and inevitable realization. She noticed that in moments of emotional overwhelm, her instinct was not to speak, but to translate her feelings into images. Photography thus became a necessity, a vital language for processing both her internal world and the external environment. This realization transformed the craft from a hobby into a life mission.
Her aesthetic roots go back to her childhood. The Renaissance masters and Baroque art shaped her fundamental understanding of light, specifically the dramatic interplay of chiaroscuro and the strength of classical compositions. As her career progressed, her academic pursuits further refined her vision; her Master’s degree thesis focused on the humanist photography of Robert Doisneau, specifically the delicate, often blurred boundary between the candid "found" moment and the elaborate narrative of a staged scene. Her visual palette was later expanded by the decadence of Jan Saudek, the provocative nature of Helmut Newton, and the "amazingly weird imaginarium" of Brooke Shaden.
‘A leaf's symphony’
Beyond the realm of photography, her work is fed by a rich library of literature and cinema. She draws from the intricate works of Murakami, Marquez, and Suskind, as well as the haunting, eternal themes found in the character of Miss Havisham.
As an "addicted cinephile," she views directors like David Lynch, Christopher Nolan, Luis Buñuel, and Giuseppe Tornatore as guardians of secret keys to fantasy universes. She also draws inspiration from Jean-Pierre Jeunet, Xavier Dolan, and Hayao Miyazaki.
At the top of her list is Yorgos Lanthimos, whose meticulously crafted, dreamlike, and often unsettling sequences unveil raw human psychology in ways that resonate with her own attraction to surrealism.
'Elegy for the Unnamed’
A hallmark of Raluca’s work is its meticulous planning. Her process begins long before the camera is ever lifted from its bag, often starting with a single word, a specific location, or a haunting phrase from a book. Inspiration for Raluca is often sudden and transformative. For instance, while reading Erin Morgenstern’s The Night Circus, she encountered a sentence describing a cabin lined with mirrors, each reflecting a different image of the character Prospero. This immediately triggered a vision for a project featuring an actor friend who is also a magician. She envisioned him in a room full of mirrors, with each reflection depicting a different facet of his identity: the actor, the magician, the lover, the masked man. Similarly, a walk in the woods can become an unplanned storyboard. Upon seeing symmetrical mounds on the edge of a forest, she immediately envisioned a "veiled woman with goat horns and feathers on her shoulders", a quiet guardian granting safe passage to another dimension.
To ensure these visions are grounded in deeper meaning, she turns to extensive research. She is currently studying Jessica Hundley’s Witchcraft to better understand the symbolism of the supernatural, the occult, and nature-based spirituality like Wicca, which emphasizes harmony with nature and the divine. Also, she likens the process to the Stora Tree Test, a projective psychological tool where the deeper, more personal subconscious feelings are only revealed through the progression of the work, specifically the third drawing.
‘Let's pretend’
Raluca’s workflow follows a meticulous narrative arc that mirrors the structural progression of a story. This journey begins with the preparation phase, where she anchors her vision in a single concept (often a specific word or an emotional state) before sketching ideas, researching references, and carefully selecting the wardrobe, location, and lighting to match the intended atmosphere.
Once on set, the process shifts toward establishing trust, which she considers the absolute foundation of her portraiture. By fostering a calm, intimate environment free from any sense of rush, she utilizes what she calls "safe shots," a technique designed to give the subject time to forget the camera’s presence. As the session unfolds, she focuses on building tension, gradually heightening the emotional intensity and introducing more complex expressions and body language. She guides her subjects through metaphors or references to books and films until a sense of vulnerability surfaces naturally, operating under the belief that true vulnerability cannot be simulated, but only invited.
This artistic vision is supported by a precise technical execution; she relies on her Canon 1DX MKII for its reliability in demanding situations and remains a staunch advocate for prime lenses. She favors the sharpness and wide apertures of the Canon 135mm 2.0, Sigma 105mm macro, and Canon 35mm 2.0, while cherishing her Petzval lens as a "true jewel" of her kit. Her technical curiosity also extends to a passion for gel photography, where she uses colored gels to sculpt light and craft specific, atmospheric color schemes.
The final vision is realized through post-processing, an essential component of her expression that accounts for roughly 60% of the completed work. Approaching this stage like a painter at a canvas, she spends hours or even days refining tones, enhancing light, and "sculpting" the atmosphere. To Raluca, this intensive editing is not an act of altering reality, but rather a way of completing the vision and fully unveiling the emotional truth captured within the raw file.
‘By the sea’
Raluca’s relationship with her work is often defined by an out-of-body perspective, a strange phenomenon where she views her finished images as separate entities rather than her own creations. This perspective is shaped by two antagonistic hypotheses regarding the nature of photography.
On one hand, she looks to Roland Barthes’ Camera Lucida (1980), where he defines the essence of photography as “ça-a-été” (that has been). In this view, the photograph is an undeniable and authentic witness to a past reality.
On the other hand, she is influenced by the spirit of René Magritte’s The Treachery of Images (“Ceci n’est pas une pipe”), which emphasizes that the representation of an object is not the object itself. By navigating these opposing views, Raluca explores the complex boundary between reality and representation, bringing the "optical unconscious" to light.
‘Worlds apart’
Beyond philosophical inquiry, photography serves a deeply cathartic purpose in her life. It acts as a medium for processing complex, heavy emotions such as grief, anxiety, and trauma. She has utilized her art to translate the traumatic experiences she endured two years ago while dealing with severe health issues.
Even more profoundly, she uses her lens to process the loss of her grandfather, the "love of her life" and the man who raised her and shaped her into the person she is today. Her work on feminine duality and inner silence remains a deeply personal series, serving as a reminder of the "words left unsaid" and the things we bury deep within the heart, never allowing them to resurface.
These projects are more than just art; they are a form of healing and survival.
‘Her flower’
As an ambassador, Raluca represents 1x global community that values depth, authenticity, and a fine art vision.
She appreciates 1x rigorous curation process for pushing her to refine her voice when she was a novice photographer, and she now uses her position to connect with other brilliant visionaries. Looking to the future, Raluca is moving further into conceptual narratives that integrate symbolic elements from nature, such as earth, ritual objects, and animal symbolism.
The "mask" remains a powerful and recurring motif for her, representing the layers of human psychology she seeks to unveil. She is particularly focused on revisiting and completing two major photo series: "Consumerist Age" and "Her Flower."
Both projects deal with significant contemporary issues, continuing her journey of translating raw human psychology and societal observation into mesmerizing visual narratives. Whether she is reading about Wicca to learn more about the supernatural or standing in a room full of mirrors to capture a friend's multi-faceted identity, Raluca continues to seek the "essence of things."
Her camera remains a bridge between the seen and the felt, ensuring that every portrait she creates is not just a captured image, but a mirror and a confession of the soul.
‘Remember’
‘Her flower’
‘Andreea’
‘Temptation’
‘Yesterday's millennia’
‘Swan's song’
‘In bloom’
‘Echoes of time’
‘Empty halls’
‘Unveiled’
![]() | Write |
| Wanghan Li PRO Impressive and expressive works with the artistic vision! Wonderful interview article! Congratulations! |
| Miro Susta CREW Dear Raluca I am not portrait photographer but I love portrait photographs, I following your beautiful portraits since länger time, I muss admit beautiful photo work, accept my sincere congratulations, and I wish also thank very much to Yvette and Marius for preparing, editing and publishing this interesting and wonderful article. Enjoy the sunny weekend. |
| Adolfo Urrutia PRO Excellent work. It's full of soul.. Congratulations, Raluca ! |
| Ovidiu Satmari PRO Wonderful work, Raluca, really impressive, congratulations! |
![]() | Raluca Arhire Thank you very much, Ovidiu! So glad that you like it!❤️❤️❤️ |
| Elena Raceala CREW Congratulations on all your work, Raluca!! I admire your impressive portraits. Excellent article, Marius, as usual!! |
![]() | Marius Cinteza CREW Thank you so much, Elena! |
![]() | Raluca Arhire Thank you very much, dear Elena! I also admire you and your work! Hugs❤️❤️❤️ |
| Nicolae Stefanel Rusu PRO Felicitari Raluca <3, impresionante lucrarile tale, lucrari cladite din suflet pentru suflet. Ma bucur enorm ca ai fost featured pe 1x. Love you <3 |
![]() | Raluca Arhire Thank you so much, my dear friend! I'm forever grateful for this <3 <3 <3 |
| Angelika Vogel PRO Wonderful, poetic works with impressive scenes that tell stories. Congratulations Raluca ! |
![]() | Raluca Arhire Thank you very much, Angelika! <3 I especially love storytelling and everything that your mind can weave out of the ordinary. |