Carmen Colombo’s Portraits and Landscapes Capture the Quiet Despair of Living in the Suburbs















For 2017’s first Cameo 25 year-old Italian photographer Carmen Colombo shares with us her recent series Al di qua delle montagne [tr. On this Side of the Mountains], a mix of portraits and landscape photographs shot in Northern Italy‘s geographical region known as Brianza.
Ciao Carmen, how are you?
I’m feeling fine, ready to start the new year with a lot of projects!
What is photography for you?
Photography for me is about slowing down. It’s a way to catch something in the non-stop flow of everyday life, whether I’m photographing a landscape or a person. It’s a way to make things yours.
What is Al di qua delle montagne about?
Al di qua delle montagne is my personal vision of the Brianza region, in Northern Italy. It is the non-history of a big suburban area without physical, administrative boundaries. My goal with this series was to offer a new way to see the Brianza through my reinterpretation of it, which uses human beings as a metaphor for boundaries. This project is particularly important to me because it shaped my vision and style as a young photographer.
Where can you be found online?
At my website, on Instagram and on Tumblr.
Keep looking...

Desperado — Hannah Nikkelson Pours Her Anxieties Into Images

FotoFirst — Harry Flook Explores the (Non-)Religious Landscapes of America’s ‘Bible Belt’

The Flowers of Kosmet — Emanuele Occhipinti Shows Us the Conditions of the Serb Minority in Kosovo

Julia De Cooker Photographs the Unexpectedly Modern Life in the Svalbard Archipelago

In the Truth — Toms Harjo Explores the Difficulties of Being a Young Jehovah’s Witness

Everything Everywhere — Helen Korpak Follows the Traces of Worldwide Globalization

Emanuele Amighetti Photographs the Teenage Soldiers of Nagorno-Karabakh
