Androni

Luca Rubino, lazily collects images and prefer to work with film. In this photoessay he looks at those spaces that are a part of our daily life but that don’t impress our perception and our memory.

Luca Rubino, Androni
There are some spaces that are a part of our daily life but that don’t impress our perception and our memory.

Those spaces are something familiar, that we habitually hang out: a subway station, an underground square, a bathroom. Visited but unspoiled spaces, places that you don’t really look at.

Entrance halls (Androni in Italian) are places that have been designed, built with a clear purpose, with a precise use; nevertheless they are invisible and remain unseen because they are not the stage for any emotional play. The uncertain beauty of Androni lasts entirely unchanged during the years and none cares of them. Despite this oblivion, Androni are the temple for the ritual of entering or leaving home.

 

Luca Rubino is a urban designer based in Milan. Photographer for passion, he still prefers to work with film in all its formats and basically in black and white. Every morning he leaves home bringing one of the cameras he collects and and takes some pictures.

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