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Faroe Islands, Where the Land Meets Its People

A visual project on remote landscapes and everyday life in the Faroe Islands

Working in the Faroe Islands means entering a territory where nature and daily life are inseparable.

The landscape is immediate, powerful, impossible to ignore. Cliffs carved by wind, open horizons, weather that constantly reshapes light and distance. But stopping there would mean telling only half of the story.

This project was built around a second layer: the human one.

Alongside the vast scenery, I documented the places where life actually happens. Homes adapted to host travelers, small community events held inside living rooms, shared meals, conversations that unfold slowly. Moments that reveal how hospitality here is not an industry, but a form of continuity.

I also spent time with local farmers and breeders, observing routines shaped by isolation, weather, and inheritance of knowledge. Work that follows natural rhythms, not trends.

My role was to connect these two dimensions into a single visual narrative: the grandeur of the landscape and the quiet precision of everyday gestures. Not as contrasts, but as parts of the same system.

The result is a body of work that portrays the Faroe Islands not as a remote spectacle, but as a living environment.

Because what makes this place truly unique is not only how it looks,
but how it is lived.

Video/Reel (in partnership)

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