
Prologue|Light Existed Before Words
When we look at the morning light,
something nameless stirs within the chest.
It moves faster than explanation,
deeper than memory,
gently shaking a quiet place inside us.
A photograph tries to hold that fleeting moment.
Yet, by capturing it, nothing is fully conveyed.
The feeling and time sealed within
gain meaning only when touched by words.
Conversely, words grow weak
when they lose their light.
Even the most beautiful poem
cannot convey the warmth of a landscape
unless it carries a visible world within it.
Light and language.
Neither can reach the heart alone.
So I wanted to create a space
that connects the two.
That is —
Visual Literature.
Writing with light,
and seeing through words.
A new beginning for literature.
I. Photographs Do Not Speak, Yet They Whisper
A photograph is always silent.
It neither explains nor excuses itself.
And yet, as we keep gazing,
something begins to move inside.
The angle of light.
The shadow of a flower swaying in the wind.
The blur of a distant figure.
In that moment,
we sense something that has no name.
That is the voice of the photograph —
a voice not heard by the ear,
but felt deep within the chest.
When the shutter closes,
that voice turns into silence.
To hear it again,
we must look.
To look is to read the echo of light.
There, the story begins.
We cry not because the image is beautiful,
but because something the photographer
spoke through silence
touches a memory within us.
— Photographs do not speak.
Yet they always whisper to us.
II. Words Cannot Be Seen, Yet They Hold Light
Words have no shape.
They vanish once spoken,
fade once written.
Even so,
humans have built their worlds through words —
to tell pain,
to share joy,
to keep memory alive.
But no matter how many words we use,
some things cannot be told:
the scent of dusk,
the warmth of a tear tracing the cheek.
No poet can explain them completely.
So humanity sought light again —
to transform what the eyes and skin remember
into something visible,
something that can be felt.
If photography captures light,
then words record its memory.
They have walked separate paths,
yet share the same wish:
—to convey.
To relive a moment that is fading away.
Words cannot be seen.
Yet within them,
light surely dwells.
III. What Is Visual Literature
Visual Literature
is the literature born in the space between photograph and word.
The photograph tells a silent poem.
The words read the white space of light.
In that instant,
seeing and reading become one act.
A photograph records the shape of the world.
Words record the inside of the heart.
When the two overlap,
the boundary between reality and emotion dissolves,
and the world becomes a story we can feel and understand.
This is not a new genre,
but a new way of sensing.
A single photograph of morning light.
A single line of words beside it.
Someone overlays their own memory,
finding a meaning entirely their own.
That shared silence —
that is the essence of Visual Literature.
It is not the expression of the author alone.
It is a literature completed together
by the one who sees and the one who reads.
Light speaks,
words gaze,
and in the reader’s heart,
the world begins once more.
Epilogue|The World Is Still Half Unseen
The moment we press the shutter,
we choose part of the world
and let another part slip away.
Writing is the same.
By speaking,
we create what remains unsaid.
Perhaps within that absence,
true meaning hides.
Photographs question us through silence.
Words listen closely to that silence.
When those two acts overlap,
a quiet resonance is born.
That is Visual Literature.
Writing with light.
Seeing with words.
And somewhere between them,
the world becomes a little more gentle.
If today you see something
and feel the urge to put it into words —
then that already
is the beginning of this literature.

