Announced Uncertainty
2023
"Are you familiar with the Russian saying «the past is unpredictable?» (...) Ah, but photographs can be doctored. One's eyes can be deceived. We see what we believe, not the other way around." - Fargo
Anamnesis
2023
A recollection of the Ideas, which the soul had known in a previous existence, especially by means of reasoning.
Transience Dysharmonia
2020
“Eternal passersby of ourselves, there is no landscape but what we are.” – Bernardo Soares in The Book of Disquiet
Rorschach
2023
What do you see here?
Confinement
2020
For the first time in the recente history of Portuguese democracy, on March 18, 2020, the State of Emergency was decreed in Portugal. An exceptional executive, legislative and judicial state that, in order to try to respond to the pandemic caused by the outbreak and contagion by Covid-19, suspends some rights previously considered as guaranteed. Quarantine and confinement times are now required. Let’s stay home so we can get out.
Building 1306
2013
In 1951, during the Cold War, French occupying forces founded an air base in Hahn, west Germany. In September 1952, however, the American and French Commanders signed an agreement which provided for the transfer of Hahn air fields to United States Air Forces (USAF) control. USAF then began to erect the seventh largest USAF base in Europe and the second largest in Germany. The initial USAF unit at Hahn was the 7356th Air Base Group, whose mission was to get the base up and running and into an operational state. Also during September 1952 the U.S. phase of construction began and during the next few years additional construction at Hahn included seven military family housing facilities, five troop facilities, hangars, covered revetments, alert taxiway and other miscellaneous structures. In 1993, after the Cold War end, the U.S. Air Force left the Hahn Air Base. The buildings were then left vacant and to abandon. Building 1306 was, amongst others, one of them. This series of photographs portray the actual state of the buildings after the inoccupation period in which they still remain.
Back to Top