The human body, mutable and ever-changing, the warmth of the family environment, and the re-articulation of everyday lived experience come together as conduits for a visual diffusion of the nature of rarity. In the photographic project Rare, these elements unfold into an emotional landscape of rare disease.
The initial concept arose following an invitation from the association “95 – Rare Alliance Greece” to create a shared narrative space. At that time, I found myself at an artistic threshold, exploring new ways to use my visual tools and seeking to give voice to human stories through a realistic and socially grounded perspective. At the outset of the project, the photographic process carried the awkwardness of the unfamiliar and a quiet hesitation toward the unknown, yet it soon evolved into something far beyond artistic expression. It became a deeply lived experience, one that reflects the importance of trust in human relationships, the value of family empowerment, and all that emerges from care, empathy, and constructive dialogue between self and others within the instability of contemporary life.
Through the project Rare, I re-examined my approach to images, reconstructing their structure and reshaping my emotional engagement in the act of photographic creation. The work’s composition blends documentary and conceptual elements. The individuals portrayed include people living with rare diseases, caregivers of those with rare conditions, and members of their immediate families. The photo sessions unfolded over roughly two years, both in their homes and in spaces connected to their daily lives. As these encounters carried an inherent sacredness, I remained continually attentive to each environment, striving to translate it into a three-dimensional experience in the visual narrative. The spaces flowed naturally, forming an essential part of each personal story, yet simultaneously stirring emotions, transforming the everyday into images that trace the journey from lived experience to memory, to depiction, and finally, to the ineffable.
The photographic project “Rare” functions as a space of intimacy and reflection, illuminating what remains unseen, inaccessible, or unknown about the “parallel lives of others” in contemporary society. Art, as a form of catharsis, explores identity and the notion of collective consciousness, while reconsidering the role of institutional care and social inclusion. Through its sequence of images, the work raises questions, provokes reflection, and invites the viewer to reconsider the perceptual frameworks through which they understand the world.
ON THE EMOTIONAL DIMENSION OF RARE
From the beginning, the journey was intertwined with a universal narrative—an emotional portrait of otherness. Yet when I started, I had no concept of what it truly means to be rare. I was simply there, standing before an emotional storm, witnessing love transform into a monumental deity—the mother of all.
Another world unfolded—poetic, untouched, imaginatively different, yet strikingly akin to ‘our own’. An indelible embrace of warmth, layered with accumulated memories, expressed only through silence. Becoming aware of this embrace felt like stepping into the secret gardens of my childhood dreams. I was not seeing; I was remembering. Remembering that innocence will always be hiding, as if in a game of hide-and-seek—at a sun-drenched Sunday family meal, in colorful butterflies dancing in the light, in grandfather’s harmonica, in the courtyard with its wooden rocking horses, in the sugar treats scattered on the ground.
Later, words emerged where none had existed, transmuting into a vast sea of images. Everything became photography—for photography is the art of feeling in order to see. And then I saw. I saw the miracle of rarity, which was nothing other than its own narrative. A poignant manifesto, engaged in an endless search beyond the self-evident. A perpetual state of wonder.














