PB — I cannot portray with a smartphone and I consider it a wrong medium for my practice, as I always need to be in full control of the shot, exposure, depth of field and movement. When I shoot with larger format films, the subject usually has a large footprint and there is a direct, physical dialogue with it. The long-time frames, the need to analyse the shot thoroughly before taking it, oblige a relationship with the subject and the context to be portrayed. The individual and the landscape merge. Photography puts everything and everyone on the same level.
Having full control of both the scene and the medium I use is fundamental and that is why I prefer shooting on film. It is not an aesthetic question: it has more to do with a desire for slowness. Times become more intimate and extended. Moreover, analogue shots are limited, expensive and their success is highly dependent on human control over the process and technology, which makes them valuable. I prefer simple cameras to the latest devices, cameras without superfluous features. The basis of photography is light, captured through a hole in a calculated time interval. It is much simpler than you think: it is all in the construction and planning phase.