Gift yourself more art and life will cover you
Snapshots of imagination
Candle to call an angel.
Digital photography
33 x 23 cm
Reality is a cry. Never regret being one of the good ones; do not apologize penitently. When reality is true, an awakening inside the agony cannot be corrupted by the madness. The photography of our time must address thought and not just compositions of light in front of the eyes. Photography is art, and art is testimony. Testimony is being and time. Martin Heidegger reminds us that old age is a phase of life where we face death. The awareness of our finitude, the reduction of possibilities, fragility, and losses. But it is also a time of reflection, understanding, and new opportunities. The legacy shareable by an elder is invaluable potential. No one can grab your memories. No one can take from you your memories. So, in the same way, we could add that there is nothing more terrible than growing old expropriated. To be a grandparent in a wasteland with a withered will; emigrated, exiled, cowardly in your land of birth. The terrible thing is the longing for what they took from you, a loss in return. Be the living one in the graveyard without the light, the great music, the instrument, the vice, the spirits, the gate, the streets… oh, damn it, old prostyle, old prostitute…
The seated Soneros.
Digital photography
33 x 25 cm
Longing for the Rumba.
Digital photography
33 x 28 cm
Granny is smoking.
Digital photography
33 x 25 cm
The pythoness.
Digital photography
33 x 26 cm
The Havana Club
Digital photography
28 x 41 cm
Foreigner from the east.
Digital photography
25 x 43 cm
Bridal Fatum.
Digital photography
30 x 38 cm
Beyond the dialogues.
Digital photography
30 x 37 cm
Timeless embryo.
Digital photography
33 x 23 cm
Contemporary photography is embracing a new focus on uniqueness and inquisitiveness. I believe that the significant historical meta-narratives discussed by Lyotard are not vanishing. They are merely experiencing repeated challenges and transformations, similar to how crustaceans shed their exoskeletons. These narratives persist and evolve, but skepticism and the changing nature of time are potent forces that erode the credibility of these traditional stories. This allows us to revisit age-old themes and issues with a fresh perspective, effectively renewing and recycling emerging values and intriguing dilemmas. This results in a celebration of distortion.
Today, it is just as convenient to depict Gilles Lipovetsky’s ideas about lightness and consumerism. It’s akin to seeing our reflections in a mirror; the narcissism and the sense of emptiness in the world are right there, watching us. It no longer resembles Milan Kundera’s novel, where the debate between heaviness and lightness made the lightness of being unbearable.
The devil took my wife.
Digital photography
25 x 34 cm
The Venezuelan who lost her wing.
Digital photography
33 x 27 cm
Blue tea.
Digital photography
33 x 26 cm
Adrenaline. Epinephrine for a green heart.
Digital photography
36 x 24 cm
Every man’s game of pool.
Digital photography
36 x 24 cm
The skaters’ selfies.
Digital photography
36 x 27 cm
A chic kiss.
Digital photography
33 x 22 cm
Childhood is the source of wonder.
Digital photography
23 x 41 cm
Maturity relinquishes the comfort and safety of the past. The freedom to commit to solid goals now faces a frenetic threat. Humans no longer feel light. Perhaps the atmosphere has become denser and more congested. This is because matter attracts matter while equal charges repel each other. Tomas is now interacting with Tereza and Sabina on a social network, virtually, not knowing if he will be more like Franz. There are so many selfies, but only a few photographs will be kept. There is a high frequency of brief sensations. Today, minimalism, the blue mood, noise, primitivism, and the screen define us.
Kitsch Park Resort: Night rent is $199 plus taxes.
( only credit cards are accepted.)
Digital photography
33 x 36 cm
The ancestral song of ourselves.
Digital photography
36 x 29 cm
The Chat. Undecodable man mixing women.
Digital photography
102 x 36 cm