PHOTOBOOKS
Ha Aretz
Named after the Hebrew language and referring to the Holy Land, Ha Aretz is a visual re-interpretation of biblical landscapes, photographed today in the context of a globalized, technological and capitalist world marked by conflict and alienation.
Min Turab
The itinerary of Roger Grasas through the countries of the Persian Gulf region has something of a nineteenth-century journey of exploration.
Min Turab —the title means “of the earth” in Arabic— shows how a landscape can be torn, fractured, and swept away, with a new one imposed in its place.
At€nea_
Atenea is a journey, both physical and symbolic, across a Europe marked by depression and disillusionment. Far removed from hungry gaze of the media, I try to offer a vision of a mysterious and unsettling continent, scatterd with scenes in which animate and inanimate beings converse in an encrypted language.
At€nea_
Atenea is a journey, both physical and symbolic, across a Europe marked by depression and disillusionment. Far removed from hungry gaze of the media, I try to offer a vision of a mysterious
and unsettling continent, scatterd with scenes in which animate and inanimate beings converse in an
encrypted language.
Min Turab _BOOK
The itinerary of Roger Grasas through the countries of the Persian Gulf region has something of
a nineteenth-century journey of exploration.
Min Turab -the title means “of the earth” in Arabic – show how a landscape can be torn, fractured,
and swept away, with a new one imposed in its place.
At€nea_
Atenea is a journey, both physical and symbolic, across a Europe marked by depression and disillusionment. Far removed from hungry gaze of the media, I try to offer a vision of a mysterious
and unsettling continent, scatterd with scenes in which animate and inanimate beings converse in an
encrypted language.
Min Turab
The itinerary of Roger Grasas through the countries of the Persian Gulf region has something of
a nineteenth-century journey of exploration.
Min Turab -the title means “of the earth” in Arabic – show how a landscape can be torn, fractured,
and swept away, with a new one imposed in its place.