If you’ve ever wanted one of my prints or asked if I sell them, this is a rare opportunity to finally get one.

Each piece is printed using archival pigment ink on Moab Fiber Baryta paper—museum-quality materials that ensure rich detail and long-term preservation. The editions are as follows: 8×10″ ($150), edition of 25; 11×14″ ($250), edition of 20; and 13×19″ ($500), edition of 10.

In addition to individual prints, each photo series—Healers, Intermission, or Burlesque Mon Amour—offers two Collector’s Edition print sets: one includes five 13×19” prints for $2,500, and the other includes ten 13×19” prints for $5,000. Both editions come with one additional print of your choice—either a duplicate from the set or selected from any other body of work—and are housed in a linen-bound archival box. All prints are signed and numbered.

These limited edition works come from deeply personal series shaped by years of commitment, and each sale directly supports the next chapter of my journey.

Additionally, a portion of the proceeds will be donated to nonprofit organizations working to challenge ICE and support immigrant communities in New York City.

Intermission

Intermission originated as a personal exercise during lockdown in NYC, a time when the passage of days felt both uncertain and unanchored. Conceived as a private and introspective endeavor, the project allowed the artist to photograph without purpose or expectation—first as a way to escape the eerie stillness of confinement, and later, the persistent noise of daily life. These Intermission prints belong to Chapter I: 2020. The series received an Honorable Mention in the 16th Edition of the Julia Margaret Cameron Award for my NYC COVID work, recognized in the categories of Black & White Series, Fine Art Series, and Documentary & Reportage Series (May 2021).

Burlesque Mon Amour

The project began on October 19, 2019, backstage at The Slipper Room on a Wednesday night in New York City’s Lower East Side. That night marked the beginning of an ongoing journey—one that would persist through a year of shutdowns and social distancing. In a time of chaos, a community formed—a ragtime family bound by resilience, creativity, and joy. Burlesque empowers both performers and audiences by affirming that sensuality comes from within, and that “sexiness” cannot be confined to any one body type or gender. Burlesque Mon Amour has been featured in several publications, including Dazed Digital and Document Journal. The series earned Natalia Neuhaus the VII Foundation–Leica Mentorship Award.

Healers

“Healers: Sex Work as a Calling” gives the viewer an intimate new perspective into the lives of those who chose this profession, humanizing what has been stigmatized and ostracized for centuries. Sex work is not only work, it allows many to heal sexual trauma, gender dysphoria or simply with something so innate to human kind yet so taboo, sexual pleasure. Healers was featured in LFI Leica Magazine and exhibited in the United States as part of the LEICA Women Foto Project group show If This Isn’t Love.