Venice — Human Absence
“Absence is not a lack, but a condition of heightened perception.”
Venice appears here not as a city inhabited by bodies, but as a perceptual structure shaped by temporal suspension. Human presence is withdrawn, leaving architecture, surfaces, and spatial rhythms to articulate their own silent grammar.
Developed through ongoing research in Venice, this project approaches the city not as an image to be represented, but as a field of experience. The urban fabric becomes a sequence of thresholds, intervals, and silent continuities, where time appears to fold upon itself and space is perceived as a condition rather than a backdrop.