Aerial Perspectives of the Peninsula
Aerial photography that reveals Baja California Sur from a unique perspective, where marine life and landscapes connect in a single frame. From above, the Gulf of California and the Pacific Ocean unveil patterns, encounters, and contrasts that only make sense from the air—schools of fish, sharks, coastlines, and desert converging in the same scene.
Images that transform scale and territory into clean compositions, where sea and land meet in their purest form.
The images shown here are a curated selection.
To access the full portfolio and view more available works, download it directly using the button below.
From above, the scene reduces to its essentials: a clean line of sand and turquoise water breathing in calm. In that visual silence, a solitary shark moves along the shoreline with precision, marking its presence like a dark stroke across a perfect canvas. Captured in Cabo Pulmo, this is pure minimalism—space, form, and life in absolute balance.
From above, the encounter is stark and precise: the deep blue of the sea stops abruptly against the ochres of the desert. There is no transition—only pure contrast, as if two opposing worlds touched for a moment. Clean lines, defined colors, and a sense of scale that turns the landscape into something almost abstract.
A detail only the air reveals. On Isla San José, the salt flats trace precise geometries: on one side, the ponds where salt is processed in light, ordered tones; on the other, the lagoon breaks through with intense reds that disrupt the harmony. A pure contrast between human control and nature—translated into color, texture, and form.
One of my favorites. From above, the peninsula unfolds in perfect horizontal layers: above, the deep ochres of the rock; below, the intense blues of the sea. There are no distractions—only color and form at their fullest expression. It is the essence of Baja California Sur reduced to its purest palette, where the landscape becomes an almost abstract composition.
A whale shark moves calmly through shallow turquoise waters, its imposing silhouette gliding effortlessly beneath the surface. The patterns on its skin break the uniformity of the blue, creating a hypnotic contrast between scale and serenity. It is pure presence—the giant of the ocean moving with a stillness that commands silence.
One of the most massive displays of wildlife in the Gulf of California. From above, a giant school of mobula rays fills the entire frame—a living pattern expanding without limits. There is no single point of focus; it is pure abundance in motion: thousands of bodies moving in synchrony, forming a dynamic texture that turns the ocean into something fully alive.
Three clean, almost perfect bands: deep blue, reef turquoise, and the rocky shoreline marking the edge. Nothing extraneous—just color, contrast, and balance in its purest form.
A bull shark patrols alone right at the edge where turquoise breaks against the rocky reef. Its silhouette cuts through the transition like a living line, moving with intent along that boundary between clarity and depth. It is territory and presence—a predator defining the exact point where two worlds meet.
A humpback whale moves alongside her calf, two bodies in perfect synchrony, gliding with a calm that commands respect. The difference in scale is clear, but the bond defines everything—protection, learning, and life in motion. It is a moment of pure connection in the ocean, where everything reduces to mother and calf.
An aerial perspective transforms the meeting between the sea and a salt flat into an abstract composition where reality becomes pattern. The waters of the Gulf of California enter into dialogue with the precise geometry of the salt flat—straight lines, defined edges, and still surfaces. The tones shift abruptly yet elegantly. Deep blues confront turquoises, grays, and whites, forming blocks of color that feel designed rather than natural. From above, scale disappears; there is no horizon—only shapes organizing themselves within the frame. Texture plays its part as well: the sea holds a subtle movement, while the salt flat remains flat, controlled, almost perfect. It is pure contrast between the organic and the engineered. An image that reads not as landscape, but as abstraction—geometry, color, and territory translated into visual language.
An aerial view reveals the reef as a living system seen from above, where structure becomes map. Coral formations trace irregular patterns beneath the surface of the Gulf of California, alternating between dense zones and sandy clearings that create natural contrast. Tones shift in layers: deep blues falling away toward the outer edge, bright turquoises over the shallows, and darker patches where the reef gains volume. Light penetrates just enough to define texture without breaking the unity of the scene. This is not an image of detail, but of scale. From above, the reef stops being a fragment and becomes structure—channels, edges, the breathing of the ecosystem. Order within the organic, a composition that appears chaotic yet follows a precise logic.