ナショナルジオグラフィックさんのインスタグラム写真 - (ナショナルジオグラフィックInstagram)「See the Instagram Live up now on @natgeo to see the story behind this project. - Photo by @gabrielegalimbertiphoto | Since Italy's coronavirus emergency began, I have chosen to continue working by photographing and interviewing (together with my friend Gea Scancarello) people who are locked in their Milan homes in compliance with the quarantine imposed by the government. I left lights outside their windows, disinfecting them first. The subjects brought them indoors; from outside, I direct how to position them. To take these photos, we've complied with all necessary safeguards.  The routine of Diego, 28, and Francesco, 38, under quarantine hasn’t changed much, they say. Francesco is a designer and an event producer; Diego an illustrator. Both work from home, so they are used to sharing space and time. And yet they both live “in a state of perennial anxiety; it never passes and even permeates our sleep,” explains Francesco. His greatest concern is work. “We are independent, and every day it is clearer that for a long time we won’t have anything to do: we need to reinvent ourselves quickly. No one will help us,” he adds. Their way to cure anxiety is to take care of each other, cooking special things and carrying out projects they had previously abandoned. “I’ve managed to quit smoking—I’ve been trying for years, but now there’s no one around me who smokes anymore and I’ve found the strength to do it.” They go out very rarely, even less than permitted. “To comply with the rules we also stopped running. For the first time I seem to have understood what it means to be in jail, to see blue sky outside and not be able to go out. I miss freedom, seeing friends, taking a walk. And not knowing when the quarantine will really end means that our return to normalcy is constantly postponed. You feel deprived of everything, I don’t wish it on anyone.” Follow @natgeointhefield for real-time coverage of this developing story from photographers around the world.  Check out Nat Geo's link in bio for more on this story.」3月25日 23時48分 - natgeo

ナショナルジオグラフィックのインスタグラム(natgeo) - 3月25日 23時48分


See the Instagram Live up now on @ナショナルジオグラフィック to see the story behind this project. -
Photo by @gabrielegalimbertiphoto | Since Italy's coronavirus emergency began, I have chosen to continue working by photographing and interviewing (together with my friend Gea Scancarello) people who are locked in their Milan homes in compliance with the quarantine imposed by the government. I left lights outside their windows, disinfecting them first. The subjects brought them indoors; from outside, I direct how to position them. To take these photos, we've complied with all necessary safeguards.
The routine of Diego, 28, and Francesco, 38, under quarantine hasn’t changed much, they say. Francesco is a designer and an event producer; Diego an illustrator. Both work from home, so they are used to sharing space and time. And yet they both live “in a state of perennial anxiety; it never passes and even permeates our sleep,” explains Francesco. His greatest concern is work. “We are independent, and every day it is clearer that for a long time we won’t have anything to do: we need to reinvent ourselves quickly. No one will help us,” he adds.
Their way to cure anxiety is to take care of each other, cooking special things and carrying out projects they had previously abandoned. “I’ve managed to quit smoking—I’ve been trying for years, but now there’s no one around me who smokes anymore and I’ve found the strength to do it.”
They go out very rarely, even less than permitted. “To comply with the rules we also stopped running. For the first time I seem to have understood what it means to be in jail, to see blue sky outside and not be able to go out. I miss freedom, seeing friends, taking a walk. And not knowing when the quarantine will really end means that our return to normalcy is constantly postponed. You feel deprived of everything, I don’t wish it on anyone.” Follow @National Geographic Creative for real-time coverage of this developing story from photographers around the world.

Check out Nat Geo's link in bio for more on this story.


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