BAAM

My work explores the relationship between memory and urban space mainly through photography.
I record architecture in a state of obsolescence before its disappearance. I am interested in documenting both structures and urban landscapes from an archaeological and poetic perspective. Through a visual research, I construct sensitive archives that preserve the ephemeral.
In other works, I approach the concept of inhabiting as something malleable and transportable. My migratory experience, having lived in a country other than my country of origin, has shaped this way of looking: photography has become a means of recording the different routes I have traveled, constructing a personal map made up of fragments of cities, found objects, and memories collected along the way. In this way, the act of inhabiting expands beyond a fixed place and becomes a practice in motion, a way of sustaining and re-signifying belonging in transit.