The shell of Venus explores the female body, based on self-representation, portrait, and self-portrait, as a starting point for self-representation, portrait, and self-portrait, as a starting point for reflection on...
The shell of Venus explores the female body, based on self-representation, portrait, and self-portrait, as a starting point for self-representation, portrait, and self-portrait, as a starting point for reflection on issues such as gender conflicts, social inequality, discrimination, and stereotypes. Topics that the female condition faces every day. It implies the use of the landscape as a stage and as an element of dislocation that
and as an element of dislocation that explores and questions, at the same time, its use in the history of the at the same time, its use in the history of art, to build a photographic discourse of its own.