The Creative Universe
Pharoh’s Body of Works
The Cartography of Stillness: Finding Form in the Silent City
An exploration of urban isolation, architectural memory, and how the physical geometry of a city shapes the internal landscape of the artist.
Oasis in the Ether
Pharoh’s seminal full-length ambient-soul project. A rich tapestry of warm analog synthesizers, field recordings from North African coastlines, and close-mic acoustic guitars that discuss exile, rediscovery, and the geometry of sound.
Monolithic Shadows, No. 4
A striking high-contrast architectural photograph captured in Berlin. The harsh diagonal shadow cuts the concrete structure into two perfect triangles, exploring the intersection of brutalism and light.
Atmospheric Refractions
A study in color and water. Photographed on the coast of Alexandria, capturing the exact second a wave crests, refracting the deep gold of the setting sun into emerald foam.
EPH INSIDER Magazine — Issue 01: Resonance
The inaugural physical publication from EPH INSIDER studio. Over 140 pages of premium, uncoated paper featuring essays on the philosophy of sound, interviews with visual minimalists, photo essays on neglected coastal architectures, and original poetry by Pharoh.
Solstice in Minor Keys
A lyrical meditation on the turning of seasons, light refraction, and the delicate overlap of music and memory.
The Sacred Geometry of the Comic Grid: Visual Narrative Beyond Words
An analytical paper on the architectural framework of the sequential comic panel, examining how layout directs cognitive pacing and emotional resonance.
A Liturgy for the Unseen
A quiet, reflective prayer dedicated to those who work in the shadows, creating and preserving beauty without seeking acclaim.
Acoustics of the Spirit
A raw, minimalist companion piece recorded live in a 14th-century stone chapel. Featuring only Pharoh’s vocals, an acoustic guitar, and the natural, cavernous resonance of the space.
The Scribe of the Sand
An intricate ink drawing depicting a mythological figure recording forgotten histories in the sand. Hand-drawn with a fine-nib drafting pen, utilizing heavy stippling and hatching.
Study for the Sacred Codex (Page 12)
Original concept art and layout design for Chapter 3 of EPH INSIDER’s upcoming comic series. Mixed media, combining watercolor washes and digital ink overlays.
The Sacred Codex: Volume I
An independent, highly artistic comic book that blends graphic storytelling with philosophical inquiry. Volume I traces the journey of an exiled mapmaker searching for a city that exists only in soundwaves.
The Cartography of Stillness: Finding Form in the Silent City
I. THE CONCRETE LATTICE
To walk through a city at four in the morning is to witness a giant in stasis. The grid, which by day acts as a rigid conduit for transaction and velocity, becomes under the cover of dew a silent cathedral. The streetlights, spaced in mathematical intervals, cast perfect cones of gold onto damp asphalt. In these hours, the city does not belong to the merchants or the commuters; it belongs to the architect’s ghost.
We often think of buildings as static containers of life, but they are active sculptors of space. The height of a facade dictates the angle of the shadow that falls across your path; the texture of a stone wall determines the acoustics of your footsteps. In the silence of the pre-dawn, one realizes that urban life is an ongoing, silent dialogue between human cartilage and reinforced concrete.
II. THE ANATOMY OF SOLITUDE
Solitude in a crowded metropolis is of a distinct variety. It is not the expansive, horizontal solitude of the desert or the sea, but a dense, vertical loneliness. You are separated from ten thousand souls by mere inches of drywall and fireproof insulation. You can hear the low thrum of their plumbing, the faint vibration of their television sets, yet you remain entirely, beautifully encapsulated.
This vertical density creates a unique pressure on the creative mind. Pharoh’s work has always responded to this tension—the longing for expansive space while navigating the compressed margins of the grid.
III. GEOMETRY AS SENTIMENT
We map our memories not onto calendars, but onto corners. A specific doorway on Elm Street becomes the repository of a conversation that redirected a life; a particular bench overlooking the river retains the weight of a silent realization. By documenting these structures, we are not merely capturing stone and steel—we are sketching the outline of our own interior transitions. The city is a mirror, folded and stacked, reflecting our own searching back at us.
