Works

Caló des Moro, Mallorca

This night landscape photograph was taken from Caló des Moro, one of the most iconic coves on the southern coast of Mallorca. Under a clear winter sky, the Orion constellation rises above the horizon, accompanied by a faint reddish haze: these are H-alpha nebulae, invisible to the naked eye, revealed thanks to the use of a specialized astronomical filter.

The scene merges the natural beauty of the Mediterranean with the precise technique of astronomical photography. Each exposure was carefully planned to preserve the true colors of the night sky and the rocky texture of the Balearic coast. In winter, these coves regain a calm that seems to belong to them by right: no tourists, no noise, just the sea, the stone, and the sky.

Eye of Es Vedrà, Ibiza

At the end of April, Ibiza still breathes with the calm of the weeks before summer. On the dirt paths along the southwest cliffs, the island retains that free and somewhat wild air that many associate with its most authentic roots.

From the so-called Eye of Es Vedrà, a natural rock formation that serves as an improvised viewpoint, there is a direct view of the islet. Its silhouette stands out in the distance, illuminated by the warm light of sunset passing through a sky covered with low clouds. The foreground rock, bathed in the same orange hue, contrasts with the deep blue of the sea. The scene is suspended between mineral volumes and soft reflections, with hardly any movement in the water.

Sanitja Port, Menorca

My first night in Menorca took me to the small port of Sanitja, at the northern tip of the island. From inside an old, partially ruined fishermen’s hut, I found a direct frame to the sea: a stone opening that cuts the horizon and frames the scene.

Through that opening, a llaüt rests moored on perfectly calm waters. Its clear reflection floats beside it thanks to the total absence of wind. The illuminated stone in the foreground contrasts with the cool tones of the sky and sea, where static clouds and scattered stars alternate. The light bathing the scene comes not from any direct source, but from a distant glow, filtered from the depths of the island.