ANOTHER DAY OF LIFE

This photographic series emerges from a nomadic journey on horseback through the landscapes of Central America. Over an extended period, I traveled with a small collective of ten women and two men who had chosen to live, at least temporarily, outside conventional social structures. Moving slowly across rivers, mountains, and rural territories, we navigated the land accompanied by a herd of horses that became both our means of travel and a bridge to the communities we encountered along the way.

The journey unfolded as a process of exchange. In the villages that welcomed us, the group offered small theatre performances, creating moments of gathering and shared imagination. These encounters transformed the expedition into a living dialogue between travelers and local communities, where hospitality, curiosity, and storytelling intertwined.

The photographs document fragments of this experience: gestures, landscapes, temporary camps, and the fragile relationships that emerged between movement, territory, and collective life. Rather than illustrating a journey, the series reflects on alternative ways of inhabiting the world—on mobility, coexistence, and the possibility of building ephemeral communities beyond fixed social norms.