In March 2020, when Covid-19 was declared a pandemic, my motherland Italy locked-down. An ocean apart from my family and friends, I started to quarantine at my chosen home, Buenos Aires.
The first weeks were terrifying, the news coming from Europe petrified me. Suddenly, I could feel every single kilometre that prevents me from hugging my parents.
My partner, our cat, and I share a 44-square-meters flat. We move around like fish in an aquarium, slowly dancing and constantly navigating moods. During long hours, I look at the clouds on the other side of the glass. The sky changes as often as my emotions. This aquarium is our small sea, green and blue, orange and gold. Here, I feel protected.
The pandemic has now moved to South America. It is said that the Buenos Aires quarantine will last until August.
Since the quarantine began, my camera has been the lens through which I looked at my emotions. Photographing my changing moods has forced me to confront my inner fears and the uncertainty that surrounds me.