“There are unusual combinations that define magical instants, and they are simply extraordinary because they are profoundly difficult to find together. The observer activates the field of the solar spectrum at dawn, where the atmosphere is the result of an internal transformation, revealing for a few seconds the components of other worlds.
This collection captures the precise instant when dawn meets life. In the stillness, the lagoon becomes a mirror to a solar spectrum from another world, displaying in a thousand golden sparkles the wings of awakening insects. Against the light, these tiny beings transform into fairies of light, dancing on their canvas between water and fire. It is a reminder of the ephemeral and vibrant beauty that exists in the smallest and most forgotten details of nature.”

Photo 1

Detail Study

It appears to be just another photograph. The magic lies in observing it in detail, in moments when the critical eye of art is displaced by the surrealism of the “sphere mind,” which seeks beauty unconditionally. I recommend observing these photographs closely in the silence of the night, when, close to sleep and trying to maintain consciousness, the mind opens to the perception of other combinations of “fullness and emptiness”. These states are natural in the artist and in anyone with a predominance of what is known as the “right hemisphere of the brain,” although they can also be achieved with practice and, above all, with the will to develop the “sphere mind.” These kinds of images are a display of natural surrealism, a challenge to perception and the development of new neural connections, thus offering an opportunity to develop natural artistic abilities.

Photo 2

Flying insects in a nature park lagoon at dawn, or a divine canvas of fairies? An image to develop profound artistic perception and consider whether reality is the product of something much deeper, something related to how we process what we receive from the spectrum. Photo-2

Detail Study

Photo 3

Flying insects in a nature park lagoon at dawn, or a divine canvas of fairies? An image to develop profound artistic perception and consider whether reality is the product of something much deeper, something related to how we process what we receive from the spectrum. Photo-3

Detail Study

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