Blue Patagonia is a series of photographic assemblages developed from landscapes in Bariloche, Argentine Patagonia. The work is based on the transformation of photography into a three-dimensional spatial structure, where each image is deconstructed into layers and reassembled as volume.
Rather than representing the landscape as a fixed image, the series preserves its internal logic while reorganizing it into stratified compositions that introduce depth, displacement, and perceptual movement. Mountains, forests, and water systems—drawn from locations such as Cerro Campanario, Llao Llao, Los Cántaros Waterfall, Lake Blest, and Lake Nahuel Huapi—are reconfigured into constructed visual fields that oscillate between image and object.
Through this process, the landscape is no longer observed at a distance but encountered as a physical presence. Blue Patagonia explores how territory can be translated into structure, allowing the viewer to experience space through fragmentation, layering, and reconstruction.