Fall
Fall explores the inevitability of impact in the face of a reality beyond any control. The character suspended in space, in free fall, embodies this idea of violent rupture, loss of control, and confrontation with an unrelenting fate. The image of the fall is central, symbolizing a moment when everything human, dreams, expectations, aspirations, collides with the brutality of the world, a world that, although it seems to offer itself to our desires, always ends up catching up with us.
In this work, the impact, though invisible, is ever-present in our minds. The ground, the final objective of this fall, becomes the harsh and unavoidable reality the individual, suspended in the void, must face. The fall is not just a physical movement, but also a symbolic act, the ultimate confrontation with truth, however hard and relentless it may be. It points to an existential question, no matter the illusion of control, the ground, or reality, always waits, without mercy.
The urban space in which the character moves emphasizes this notion of confinement, constant social pressure, imposed structures that push the individual toward this fall, this disconnection from oneself and from the landmarks they thought they knew. The distorted, twisted buildings serve as a reminder of the instability of a world that seems increasingly out of control. The very angle of the fall invites us to reconsider our place in this world and to admit that sometimes, the fall is inevitable.
In this work, I also explore a more internal dimension. The fall becomes a metaphor for psychological and spiritual collapse. It echoes the deep fear of failure and confrontation with the reality of the world and oneself. The character, in this endless fall, is caught between the desire to escape social gravity and the inevitability of the impact of this fall.
The ground awaiting the character represents this ultimate confrontation with an external, but also internal reality. It is a hard, cold, and relentless ground, the one on which everyone must land after facing their own illusions. This moment of impact, once it occurs, becomes an awakening. The fall is an irreversible act, a reflection on the fatality of our trajectories and the confrontation with the inevitable.