The photographic moment for me is intuitive, an inevitable drive. In that creative moment my unconscious emerges to guide decisions. In digital immediacy, the other eye, the rational one, looks and then gives its opinion and says more here or there and the sequence is repeated when the situation allows it. Many times during the process of Invisible Limits I wanted to fade away so as not to interfere and achieve the image as lively and natural as possible, to capture that unique and genuine gesture that is revealed almost imperceptible and thus get closer to being able to reflect a tiny fragment of reality. A complex learning experience that I had to go through was breaking the barrier of inhibition to be able to flow and photograph in a space where the majority of those present do not want to be.
I am interested in exploring the unlimited that is very difficult to grasp, so I thought that a possible path was through the recognition of one’s own limits. Once one becomes aware of them, one can understand that in most cases they are nothing more than a mental construction that must be dealt with in order to grow and expand, undo established preconceptions and remain open and attentive. In this moment of so much separation and so many barriers between us I wanted to highlight them and question them in some way.