Voice · Body · Nature
TENERIFE, CANARY ISLANDS
RETREATS, WORKSHOPS AND STORYTELLING INSPIRED BY ASIA, THE MEDITERRANEAN AND THE ATLANTIC OCEAN THROUGH MOVEMENT, PHOTOGRAPHY AND CREATIVE WRITING
RETREATS, WORKSHOPS AND STORYTELLING INSPIRED BY ASIA, THE MEDITERRANEAN AND THE ATLANTIC OCEAN THROUGH MOVEMENT, PHOTOGRAPHY AND CREATIVE WRITING
Specializing in photojournalism, lifestyle, nature, street style, sports, traditions and culture across Asia, the Mediterranean and the Atlantic Ocean.
Explore more of my photography work & contact for booking a photography assignment
Through initiatives and events that encompass voice, body and nature, Vivarium emphasizes the value of the ocean as a place for life.
Private online sessions
In person and online workshops and retreats in movement (Pilates, Yoga and Animal Flow), Photography, Journaling and Creative Writing
Saturday, 18th January 2025, 2PM GMT / 3PM CET (2.5h)
This is an opportunity to start the year in a very different way. We’ll focus on dreaming and imagining a more hopeful 2025. We’ll create a space for a more mindful and embodied lifestyle where we can increase our opportunities for connection with ourselves, the people around us and nature.
Just like waves that travel through the ocean bringing energy from faraway storms into our local sea shores, we’ll learn how embodied journaling can also help us embrace our very own transformative powers. The session will start with a Meditation and a Yoga practice inspired in the Ocean to explore inner connection and get the mind and the body ready for journaling.
Comet C/2023 A3 Tsuchinshan ATLAS over the volcano Mount Teide, in Tenerife, Canary Islands. Tsuchinshan (紫金山 Zǐjīn Shān, in Mandarin ) means Purple Mountain, in Chinese. The shots were taken during the comet’s last few days visiting the Earth, when it was most visible right after the sunset, and before it left us for another 80.000 years.
Correfocs (literally meaning Fire Run) is a celebration typical of Catalan Culture and Folklore that involves running the streets of old Catalan villages surrounded by fire and monstrous/mythical figures. This practice dates back to the Middle Ages and it borrows from the tradition of the 'Devil Dances' (Balls del diable), symbolizing the fight between good and evil. However, Correfocs as we know them today are a relatively new practice that took shape in the late 1970s with the death of Dictator Franco and the birth of Democratic Spain. Then, Catalan people finally had the chance to openly embrace their traditions and culture without risking prosecution.
The municipality of Valleseco, in Santa Cruz de Tenerife, celebrates the annual boarding of La Virgen del Carmen.
Where the Ter River meets the Mediterranean sea. Textures and colours during a new moon sunset in l’Estartit, Spain. March 2024
G A L L O P is the result of Laia Palma’s inviting me to spend a couple of hours at her Equestrian Club, Equus Empordà (Spain). During this limited amount of time, I followed Laia around her club while she told me about the values behind the vision of the club she has been growing during the last few years. And how her unique relationship with the horses and other animals inhabiting the place make Equus Empordà a very unique Equestrian Club.
Ri Tan Gong Yuan 日坛公园, the park of the temple of the Sun, was one of my secret spots in Beijing. A place I used to go to for reflection. This balcony was one of the spots where I managed to make time to find stillness. It turned out, I wasn’t the only one relying on this sacred space to find solace and to understand the dynamics of an ever changing environment.
Forallac's charcoal pile is much more than just the recreation of a tradition. It has become a symbol of a communitarian way of life and of the preservation of a very important set of Mediterranean values. A place where people gather in an environment in which old lifestyles and ways of being are brought back to life.
This is an excerpt from my book Passing Guest, where I explain my personal relationship between storytelling and language. Beyond my writing, speaking several languages is a big part of my life. I grew up bilingual (Spanish and Catalan) and at different stages of my life I learnt French, English and Chinese, as well as some Korean and Bahasa Indonesia. My relationship with all these languages shaped my experiences and my life away from my home country. In my novel The Mansion South of Maple Street, I wanted to give languages an important value to the story and the are part of the main character’s relationship with the environment in different ways.
Since their foundation in 2013, in Nigeria, Comic Republic has been reminding the world that the heroes and villains of our comics should all have a single mission: to find unity within the diversity of our humanity. Comic Republic’s stories stay away from any of the stereotypes that define African villains in international comics. Instead, they bring a new and much needed approach to the conversation of what it means to be evil.
Surf miniature shots of the latest swell in Tenerife, Canary Islands in November 2024. Taking the chance to play around with my camera, my lens and perspectives.