Edizione italiana
#3.8 Giudicare, valutare e misurare
Da mucchi di immagini a sequenze fotografiche, passando per l'alchimia.
I’m a photographer interested in humans and psychological realities. I’m working on a Bachelor’s Degree in Psychosocial Studies. I live in the Italian Alps with my husband and a wolfdog.
Edizione italiana
Da mucchi di immagini a sequenze fotografiche, passando per l'alchimia.
Edizione italiana
E ritrovare la strada per caso.
English Edition
Least effort principle and productive thinking. Wolves spend most of their lives lazing around. I didn’t note the references, but a few months ago I stumbled upon this study that followed the life of a pack in the wild: 1. When food abounds and there are no threats, wolves
Edizione italiana
Lunga vita e prosperità.
English Edition
Flows of nothingness and worlds full of meaning. This post is the son of a computer engineering degree, Joan Fontcuberta’s essays, and interactive fiction1. We’ll talk about information flow, meaning, and the eternal dilemma of “there are too many images out there” that photography has been carrying around
English Edition
Holistic and analytical visions in photographic composition. In this article, we’ll talk about composition and fish. The organization of elements within the photographic frame is one of the topics I find most interesting and to which I return repeatedly. There are many different ways to read an image but
Edizione italiana
Sulle difficoltà nel coltivare la fotografia tra una bolletta e l’altra.
Edizione italiana
Anima, eccezionalità e norma.
English Edition
When dealing with people, no one system works for everyone. One of the key features of my photographic process is feeling awkward and uneasy. Honestly, I think a certain amount of embarrassment is part of the photography package, especially when dealing with people. Yet scrolling through social feeds, I see
Edizione italiana
Ricerca, attenzione e fotografie fuori fuoco.
English Edition
Images between priming and activation levels. In 1996 psychologists John A. Bargh, Mark Chen, and Lara Burrows organized an experiment with a group of students at New York University. The task, disguised as a language proficiency assessment test, consisted of constructing four-word sentences from randomly mixed groups of five terms
Edizione italiana
A proposito di carriera e talenti.