Seeing documentary photographers capturing Italy's Covid-19 outbreak, Camilla Ferrari thought about how she should best process this period. "I had a different mission," she says. "We are all stuck at home. What can we do about it? I decided to focus on that, to regain presence in my home and find myself inside the four walls which would be my companion for such a long time."
Left: "The sun was setting," says Camilla. "While opening the window for an overdue clean, a sun ray hit the glass and lit my face. For a moment, I couldn't see anything. When I looked again, I could see the outer cityscape, with birds flying over the building, and the sun disappearing behind them. This window became a portal." Taken on a
Canon EOS R with a
Canon RF 24-105mm F4L IS USM lens at 43mm, 1/1000 sec, f/10 and ISO 100. © Camilla Ferrari
Right: Camilla's pet fish Hades, a Black Moor goldfish. "When I got closer to the aquarium, Hades got very excited and started dancing with his fins, creating fascinating shapes and movements," she says. Taken on a
Canon EOS R with a
Canon RF 35mm F1.8 MACRO IS STM lens at 1/100 sec, f/1.8 and ISO 12,800. © Camilla Ferrari
"The aim of my work is to convey a space of silence," says visual artist Camilla Ferrari. In a world where visuals are so often designed to shout, Camilla's pieces stand out by doing the opposite. "I like my work to create an atmospheric place, so that when someone looks at my work, it is not so much about what happens in the picture, but more about the space it conveys around you. My perfect idea would be for someone to look at my work because they needed peace, and to find calm."
Based in Milan, Italy, and known for her signature diptychs pairing stills and vertical video, Camilla's work revolves around overlooked subjects, including the poetry of day-to-day life and the relationships between people and their environments. "The smaller things of everyday life, the importance of small gestures, the relationship between what is real and what is not real," she explains. "Playing with this idea of photography as a medium, as an entrance to that world of perception, which is very subjective."