Urban Reflections
The photographs presented here were taken in different cities around the world. Their realization connects me to simple fragments of the space and everyday culture of these places.






Reflective phenomena in their mirroring make us realize that even rigid and static symbols, such as a building, can be infused and full of movement in a new space. The term “reflection” comes from the Latin reflexus and has various uses. In the photographs in “Urban Reflections”, the reflection of light conveys the sensory of the work of art, which can be perceived from a perspective opposite to that of its idealization, of the new mirroring the old, of the eyes meeting the lens in an unusual direction… I think reflections teach us about the need to flow.
No wonder they are used so often in photography, because as Henri Cartier-Bresson told us,”To photograph is to put the head, the eye and the heart on the same line.”

In the simplicity of Urban Reflections, I invite you to observe and experience the reflective phenomena that arise in our daily lives. In times of uncertainty and fear, perceiving them, like a meditation, gives us the peace of feeling, living in the present and knowing that reflection is not always about diving into the clear.
What separates us from the banal is the intentionality of our gaze.




