This series follows Beatrice—a quiet soul in perpetual motion—drawn by the pull of sunlight. Through soft glances, passing shadows, and moments suspended in golden light, Looking for the Sun captures the deeply human search for belonging, warmth, and meaning.

At the heart of the series lies a small but potent detail: the number 1945, inked delicately on her wrist. It's not a code, not an aesthetic flourish—but a tribute. The year her grandmother was born. It is an anchor, a thread of memory worn like a compass, guiding her across borders and time zones. In every image, it reminds us that Beatrice doesn’t travel alone; she carries the lineage of love with her.

The photographs trace Beatrice's journey through landscapes and moments—foreign cafés, windswept shores, and mountain paths—each place imprinted with an emotional texture. These aren’t just backdrops; they are fragments of a larger mosaic she's quietly assembling, a home built not from walls, but from sunrays and memories.

Beatrice is not just looking for a place to stay. She is seeking something quieter, something enduring: the feeling of enoughness, the rightness of being. Through each candid frame and sunlit portrait, the series invites the viewer to walk with her, to feel the weight of memory, and to witness the beauty of becoming.

Ultimately, Looking for the Sun is not just about a woman moving through the world—it's about the light she finds within herself along the way.

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Naples After Dark