Marsèll presents ‘Formato’, an evolving project that explores observation as both an aesthetic and an interpretive practice. Five photographers share images that express their way of seeing the world. The title alludes to the photographic format, the framework that shapes perception, and evokes the idea that every vision is a way of interpreting reality. Each contribution to Formato is both an exercise in attention and an act of personal expression.
‘A Lightness of Being’ is an invitation to pause: to let yourself be carried away by the gentle rhythm of things, to discover how the ordinary can become contemplation, and how the journey becomes a form of inner listening. Each photograph is a slow breath, a fragment gathered along the way.
Matteo de Mayda explores the symbolic and physical life of columns in his project ‘Non plus Ultra’. While columns usually symbolize strength and stability, in Venice they reveal fragility and change. Built on water and shifting sediments, the city constantly adapts. Its columns sometimes crooked, broken, or hidden within buildings reflect this unstable balance.
Gaia Anselmi Tamburiniexplores the spiritual atmosphere of Nepal, from the vibrant streets of Kathmandu to remote Himalayan regions near Tibet. Inspired by the travel writings of Giuseppe Tucci. The work reflects how spirituality shapes everyday life, where temples, prayer wheels, and sacred mantras create a rhythm that accompanies both travel and daily experience.
Shot during an unplanned drive across Arizona, this project unfolded without a predetermined route, allowing locations to shape the narrative as it evolved. The journey moved between sites of geological magnitude and architectural idealism, including Arcosanti, the Petrified Forest, the Grand Canyon, and Sedona.
Inspired by the idea of experiencing a Martian landscape without leaving Earth, the artist turned to Timanfaya National Park, a dramatic volcanic terrain shaped by more than one hundred eruptions that continued for over six years in the 18th century. The vast lava fields and stark red-black landscapes closely resemble the surface of Mars, creating an otherworldly environment.