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Fractal consists in a parallel reading of a territory, in this case, Lisbon, through the heterogeneity of its religious communities, and the different manifestations of faith and worship.
I am interested in aspects of human nature that I cannot understand or fully grasp, that don’t belong to me or to which I do not belong. Faith, being one of the great, if not, the greatest mystery of an individual imagination is, at the same time, an apex of collective identity.
Based on a desire to understand something that I cannot intuitively find tangible, I’ve made use of photography as a consistent means to be present and delve into various religious communities. What I found, what attracted me, was not just the differences in rituals, practises, cultures, iconographies, and even languages, but instead what was indeed shared and common to all. Thus, the choice to not centre the narrative around portraits that revealed the identity of each believer, but instead to represent the ethereal and oneiric, and in the end, the universal.
My understanding of faith not as a common belief but ultimately as a common human need, as a horizontal element, not individualizing the name that each of them may claim, relates to the conclusion that each religious belief system is but a different attempt to offer or unveil an answer to a common and universal question.
Fractal, being an element of the field of mathematics, is a geometric figure found in nature and which is composed of an object whose separate parts repeat the features of the complete whole, representing the original entity. In truth, I find myself much further away from each one of them than they are from each other. Deep down, it represents a foreign gaze onto an intimacy in which I do not participate.