Seeing comes before words. The child looks and recognizes before it can speak.
— Ways of Seeing, John Berger (1972)
Image—still or moving—has the power to capture reality or create new worlds. To move people with emotion. To convey ideas without stating them. To seduce or shock the eye. To kindle cultural movements. To make a subject, an object or a project iconic. Every detail matters: intention, form, narrative, shape, colour, contrast, pace, sound, font, balance, texture, words, references.
Two hundred years after the invention of photography, image has never been more essential. We consume visuals everywhere, at every moment. We communicate through them across digital and physical spaces. We rely on them to bring an idea to life, to launch a project, to gather fans at a concert, to sell a vinyl record or to give identity to a brand. And as images pervade, audiences have become more attentive and more demanding.
A visual work must cut through the noise, claim attention, and feel both original and immediately recognisable. It must be authentic yet aesthetic, aligned with the core identity of the project at every layer of detail. It must adapt to every format, platform and rhythm. Expectations are higher now than ever.
About KÅARGHAUS
KÅARGHAUS is an artist who meets those expectations with a refined visual edge. With over five years of experience as a graphic designer, filmmaker and art director, he creates images that merge artistic sensibility with technical precision—through film direction, video editing, colour grading, graphic design, visual identity conception and photography.
Currently based in Paris, his practice is rooted in the music industry, where imagery must be eloquent and forward-thinking. He has worked on live concert video recordings, album cover design, event posters, teasers and full visual identities for artists and labels. His portfolio includes collaborations with Cercle, Desertland, Ninja Tune, Nohr, Circoloco, The Martinez Brothers, Ano Ano Records and the complete artistic direction and visual world of Inkwells, for which he directed a music video exhibited at the Berlin Music Video Awards 2025.
Across all mediums, he transforms sound into image, energy into form, and artistic vision into coherent visual languages. Whether capturing the raw electricity of a performance or building an entire universe around a release, KÅARGHAUS delivers high-end visuals informed by contemporary digital trends and shaped by a distinctly gritty, analogue-driven aesthetic.