What drew you to photography?
I thought I'd be a painter when I was a child. I spent my early years travelling, and most of my time drawing. I took a photography workshop during my foundation, and I was amazed that you could have an idea, shoot it in the morning, process it, and do a print the next day. I adored each step of the photography process, and I had a really magical time in the darkrooms. I'm a bit of a daydreamer, so that tempo suited me. Instead of applying for a painting degree, I went on to photography instead.
I would say it was very organic. I didn't choose photography, it just happened upon me, really.
Do your early experiences impact your practice today?
My upbringing has completely shaped me and the way I make pictures. All my photographs are about people, whether they are portraits, or landscapes that tell the story of a dwelling.
I have this particular childhood memory from when I lived in Italy. It was my last day at my school, and I was riding home on the school bus. I remember my friend getting off the bus, and the indentation left in the pleather seat. He got up, and I knew that would be the last time I would see him. I was around 11, and I remember really noticing that dent in the seat. For me, [this experience] is my first photograph, though I never made it. Moments like that inform my photographs. In this way, you can have photographs about people, even if there is nobody within miles.
Could you tell us more about your series Wildfires of Palermo, which was awarded in last year’s Sony World Photography Awards?
That was a strange experience. That series is a great example of an idea or a feeling about a photograph that I'd had for years and years, but when I came to shoot, it was very immediate. This wasn't something I spent six months doing a photo essay on. It was there, happening, and I just happened to be on a job nearby. I was lucky to have the tools with me, and just enough time to stop and photograph. Though it only took me a short period of time to capture the images, it was a long time in the making, because I think you get to a point as a creative where you are certain of the kinds of photographs you want to take. I think the fact that these images were quite instinctive to make was to their credit. If I had planned the images, not that you can really plan a wildfire photograph, I'm not sure the series would have had the same energy.