Really lovely, Eliza, a treat. I particularly like the people in shadow/the shadows at the bottom of the steps outside what I take to be a church in Palermo. A picture to linger on.
Wonderful photographs thank you so much. If you are ever in London, the National Gallery has 5 Antonello de Messina paintings which are really worth seeing.
Such an amazing photographer you are. Reminds me of how my dream to move to Italy at least part-time is so alive. If you start a photo account on IG - I will definitely follow. Life is so much more than gender. I have spent so many years doing amazing creative things and traveling - why would someone waste their time and health on stuff that doesn't really matter? 🤔
I so appreciate these photos, as I don't think I'll ever travel abroad--too much weeding to do in my garden. Last time I traveled on public transportation in the States, I encountered obnoxious, narcissistic men in their "gather fuel" mode. Let me know if you're ever visiting the Hudson Valley, you have a guest room, a curated woods, home cooked food and a very appreciative hostess!
These images gave me such a sense of the surreal passage of time. The modern day people living amongst these astonishing relics of their past. Our societies don't make things intended to last for a 1000 years anymore. The surreality was heightened for me because I'm Australian, and while we share a climate very close to the Sicilian, (not so much proximate to the ocean, I live 5 hours from the Pacific) there are no buildings or monuments more than a couple of hundreds of years old at most all around me. I had a similar sense of deep time when I went to India 24 years ago but its not a thing for Australians to live amongst the relics of our forbears. Though the indigenous people were here for 40,000+ years, beyond carvings and paint surviving in isolated locales, they built virtually nothing structural (certainly not buildings) that survives in modernity.
Spectacular images! Thank you for sharing!
Really lovely, Eliza, a treat. I particularly like the people in shadow/the shadows at the bottom of the steps outside what I take to be a church in Palermo. A picture to linger on.
Wonderful photographs thank you so much. If you are ever in London, the National Gallery has 5 Antonello de Messina paintings which are really worth seeing.
Spectacularly observant…just gorgeous, nuanced photography. Your work is incredible. Mille grazie
(Grazie mille?) Anyway, a thousand thanks for sharing your art.
Such an amazing photographer you are. Reminds me of how my dream to move to Italy at least part-time is so alive. If you start a photo account on IG - I will definitely follow. Life is so much more than gender. I have spent so many years doing amazing creative things and traveling - why would someone waste their time and health on stuff that doesn't really matter? 🤔
I so appreciate these photos, as I don't think I'll ever travel abroad--too much weeding to do in my garden. Last time I traveled on public transportation in the States, I encountered obnoxious, narcissistic men in their "gather fuel" mode. Let me know if you're ever visiting the Hudson Valley, you have a guest room, a curated woods, home cooked food and a very appreciative hostess!
Beautiful!!!
Beautiful ❤️
Gorgeous Eliza.
These images gave me such a sense of the surreal passage of time. The modern day people living amongst these astonishing relics of their past. Our societies don't make things intended to last for a 1000 years anymore. The surreality was heightened for me because I'm Australian, and while we share a climate very close to the Sicilian, (not so much proximate to the ocean, I live 5 hours from the Pacific) there are no buildings or monuments more than a couple of hundreds of years old at most all around me. I had a similar sense of deep time when I went to India 24 years ago but its not a thing for Australians to live amongst the relics of our forbears. Though the indigenous people were here for 40,000+ years, beyond carvings and paint surviving in isolated locales, they built virtually nothing structural (certainly not buildings) that survives in modernity.