Pasolini Faces

A study of non-performative presence in the everyday.

Pasolini Faces is a collection of portraits taken in Georgian Bazzar. This is photographic study of non-performative presence in everyday life. Inspired by Pier Paolo Pasolini’s radical gaze, the project seeks to reveal archetypes in ordinary faces and gestures — men and women of the marketplace, suspended between anonymity and timelessness. Each portrait goes beyond capturing a single person — it becomes a fragment of collective humanity, where universal roles emerge: the Heart, the Witness of Time, the Father, the Apprentice… By refusing spectacle and performance, these images celebrate the simple dignity of being present— showing faces as vessels of history, memory, and Fate.

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Modes of Behaviour