

















‘Sul Monte Fiocca si è sciolta la neve‘ is a visual and poetic investigation of the winter coastal landscape, but also an archive of gestures, of waiting, of listening: a Pindaric flight of the gaze that follows the path.
For three years, I walked along the coasts during winter in a solitary and consistent, almost ritual practice, intertwined with my artistic research.
Walking becomes a gesture of listening, a form of writing, and an exercise in looking.
The work is composed of a series of photographs and notes written in diary form, gathered over time and within the space of the shoreline. The research traverses both the journey of the gaze within the coastal landscape and that of the artist’s body, in a movement that follows the flow of thoughts and the natural and living elements inhabiting the coasts in winter.
With a dual tension — environmental and personal — the winter landscape becomes a mirror reflecting the metamorphosis of places and the fragility of boundaries, along with the experience of time as it stretches or slowly slips away, step by step.
It is within this ambiguous space — between resistance and transformation — that the work moves.
A non-linear narrative, made of bodies, erosion, and metamorphosis. The gaze that wanders away, then returns; time that stretches or accelerates. It is an inner diary written while walking. In this displacement between perception and reality, a reflection on climate and the normalization of change emerges. The time “lost” walking becomes part of the work, returned through images and words.