The Story of PxBR

Everyone on this planet is created with a purpose.

You might be lucky enough to find it right away, or it might take years before it shows itself to you.

As far as PxBR goes, it was a mixture of both.

Since my childhood, I was always fascinated with space and the objects that populated it—the unanswerable questions about other galaxies, systems, and planets. 

And human race's journey to space… One of my first memories was watching the iconic footage from Apollo 4, the first stage jettison, captured from the onboard camera, over and over again.

I was also interested in the concept of religion. 

Who created our belief system? Where did we come from? What happens when we die? 

Later in life, putting these together with digital imaging, PxBR was born.

All these questions above are loaded and complex, and one cannot simply answer with one sentence. But the beauty of it is that it's a game, like a puzzle, and one can start somewhere eventually and put one piece at a time. Suddenly, you have a vague and incomplete picture of what it might be.

There are moments in life what I call 'God Moments.' These are the moments, or even seconds, where everything in life that is important to you comes together, embodying the values you believe in, in one simple object or an idea. And things start to make sense.

It might be the moment you realize you live the life you dreamt of 20 years ago.

Or it might be a single word in a random book that becomes the answer you've been looking for.

Or a song you might hear in the middle of noise and chaos.

These are the definition of 'God Moments' to me, and they are the pieces from the 'puzzle.'

Have you ever experienced such a moment?

PxBR was born out of one of these moments. 

From galaxies and planets to clouds and trains, PxBR explores the meaning of everything around us.

PxBR tries to understand who we are and where we come from by telling the great story of the heavens and the earth through visuals.

And that's why we keep asking questions, looking for answers, and keep telling stories.

That's why we keep gazing!

 
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The Story of ‘Story’