This is Not My Bed

This project offers an intimate glimpse into the lives of those who inhabit the streets and shelters—people too often seen, yet unseen. Through photography, it explores the emotional and physical landscapes of homelessness: the resilience, vulnerability, and the silent dignity of individuals adapting to a life in cohabitation with strangers, in spaces never truly their own.

Can we speak of the homeless as a separate social group—or are they, rather, a mirror of our society’s fractures?

«This is not my bed» seeks to bear witness to the quiet acts of resistance that help preserve identity and humanity in the face of erasure. It is a humanistic journey, reminding us that to photograph is not only to observe, but to connect. Each image invites us to consider how lives, even at the margins, remain part of a shared human story—layered, fragile, and deeply interwoven with our own.

This project offers an intimate glimpse into the lives of those who inhabit the streets and shelters—people too often seen, yet unseen. Through photography, it explores the emotional and physical landscapes of homelessness: the resilience, vulnerability, and the silent dignity of individuals adapting to a life in cohabitation with strangers, in spaces never truly their own.

Can we speak of the homeless as a separate social group—or are they, rather, a mirror of our society’s fractures?

«This is not my bed» seeks to bear witness to the quiet acts of resistance that help preserve identity and humanity in the face of erasure. It is a humanistic journey, reminding us that to photograph is not only to observe, but to connect. Each image invites us to consider how lives, even at the margins, remain part of a shared human story—layered, fragile, and deeply interwoven with our own.