"I do not merely photograph subjects; I record the persistence of light across vast distances and intimate cycles."
Based in the Pacific Northwest, Genevieve Ma'yet is a self-taught naturalist and artist dedicated to the study of the unseen. Her work exists at the intersection of rigorous science and cinematic storytelling, capturing the profound stillness found in both deep-space astrophotography and the terrestrial wilderness.
Whether peering through a telescope at a nebula light-years away or documenting the rugged textures of the Earthbound, Ma'yet’s lens seeks the same truth: the resilience of beauty in the dark.
As an author and artist, her vision extends into the realm of the "Scientific Narrative." Through her series, Aurora and Sirius, she translates complex celestial mechanics into a visual language of courage and curiosity—ensuring the next generation of explorers sees themselves reflected in the stars.
Ma'yet’s practice is a pursuit of clarity, inclusivity, and the quiet awe that connects the human spirit to the wonders of the cosmos.