I discovered the world of photography through the mountains, mountaineering and climbing with my father. In those days the motivation towards photography was always accompanied by a thirst for adventure, proximity to nature and discovering new walls to climb. Those were times of adolescence, of discoveries, of spending many hours on the rock surrounded by challenges and dreams.
Over the years, the balance between climbing and photography remained balanced, but it was through a first trip to India in 1995 when the fascination with the human being was activated and definitively installed in my life.
Subsequently, my professional career focused on curiosities and activities related to individuals, people or subjects; we can define it as “an anthropological photograph” where homo sapiens is always unpredictable, capable of the best and the worst at the same time.
Long-distance traveler, airport meat with endless waits, reviewer of alien and fleeting faces, bearer of visual dreams always accompanied by those cameras that transform imaginary landscapes into real frames.
In this way, photography becomes the perfect tool to tell stories on the one hand and a philosophy of life on the other.