Sebastian Bleisch 11 Apr 2026
Sebastian’s response is disarmingly honest. “I understand being alone in a big room. I understand waiting for the bus in the rain. That’s not grown-up stuff. That’s just feelings.”
“Adults think blur is a mistake,” he says, packing his camera into a backpack covered in astronaut stickers. “I think blur is what memory looks like before you’re old enough to lie about it.” sebastian bleisch 11
“I just picked up my mother’s old phone,” Sebastian recalls, his voice still carrying the unpolished lilt of childhood. “I didn’t like the crowded viewpoints. Everyone was taking the same picture of the Matterhorn. So I walked a few meters down the trail, got low to the ground, and waited for a cloud to cover the peak.” Sebastian’s response is disarmingly honest
At an age when most children are mastering long division or debating the merits of Minecraft vs. Roblox, Sebastian Bleisch is quietly pulling off a different kind of feat: redefining the visual vocabulary of modern travel photography. That’s not grown-up stuff
Sebastian Bleisch is 11 years old. He is not the future of photography. He is its unsettling, beautiful present.