
“Phoenix,” York Minster, U.K.
In the hush beneath a vaulted ceiling, where light filters through stained glass like liquid color, time seems to loosen its grip. Stone ribs stretch overhead like the bones of some ancient creature, and every footstep dissolves into echo. It’s within this suspended stillness that photographer Peter Li positions his lens–not simply to document sacred architecture, but to reimagine how we see it.
For years, Li has traveled across Europe photographing churches and cathedrals, transforming their monumental interiors into luminous, immersive visions. His ongoing series reveals these spaces not as static relics of history, but as living sanctuaries shaped by devotion and light.
Through his meticulous panoramic process, often stitching together dozens of exposures into seamless compositions, he captures what the human eye alone cannot: the full sweep of a nave rising into celestial heights, the delicate symmetry of arches unfolding in every direction at once.
In many of the images, the viewer stands precisely at the cathedral’s heart. The perspective feels almost omniscient. Columns radiate outward in a balanced harmony, gilded altars glow like sunlight, and ceilings blossom into intricate constellations of fresco and stone. The effect is both architectural and cosmic, as if the buildings themselves are breathing.
In one particularly evocative photograph taken inside York Minster, incense lingers in the air during Holy Week and softens the Gothic lines into a hazy dream. Shafts of light pierce through the clerestory windows, illuminating drifting smoke like visible prayer. The photo feels less like documentation and more like reverence.
Across Spain, France, and the United Kingdom, Li continues photographing spaces that have stood for centuries. Whether capturing the ornate flourishes of a Baroque sanctuary or the austere elegance of Gothic rib vaults, he reveals a shared language of devotion etched in stone.
See more of Li’s work when you visit his Instagram.
Photographer Peter Li reimagines Europe’s cathedrals through immersive panoramic images that capture their full height and symmetry.

“Yggdrasil,” Catedral de Segovia, Spain

“Untitled,” Saint Étienne du Mont, Paris

“Amphisbaena,” The Vatican Museum, Vatican City

“Astraeus,” St. Paul Cathedral, Pittsburgh
Using meticulous stitching techniques, each composition reveals soaring vaults, ornate alters, and radiant stained glass in a single frame.

“Elements,” Church of San José, Madrid

“Evanescent,” York Minster, U.K.

“Kosmos,” Basílica del Real Monasterio de San Lorenzo de El Escorial, Spain

“Untitled (Organ),” La Madeleine, Paris
Together, the images form a visual pilgrimage that invites viewers to slow down and experience sacred architecture in a new way.

“Untitled (Vertorama),” La Madeleine, Paris

“Phoenix,” York Minster, U.K.

“Rivendell,” Sainte-Chapelle, Paris.

“Rosella,” Catedral de Almudena, Madrid

“Veles,” St. Nicholas, Prague

“Viserion,” Ely Cathedral, U.K.
















































































