On the coast of Puerto Pirámides, in Patagonia, the tide has left its signature.
Wavy, rhythmic lines chase each other across the muddy sand, shaped by the slow breath of the sea. The result is a living, engraved surface that turns a minimal landscape into a pure abstract composition.
The wave patterns etched into the sand recall something ancestral and gestural, a natural calligraphy telling the story of water’s passage. The low-angled light highlights ridges and shadows, turning the seafloor into a graphic canvas, between drawing and matter.
It is the sea pulling back its waters, revealing something hidden, intimate, primordial. As it retreats, the lines become traces left on the living body of the landscape, as if the seafloor were exposing its inner structure: fragile, secret, and beautiful.
Born in Milan on November 28, 1977, I’ve been living in Bormio for many years, where I work as a ski instructor and draw endless inspiration from the surrounding mountains and nature.
Photography, to me, is not just about representation, it’s about interpretation.
Many of my..
Read more…