Out of Africa is photographic research on the phenomenon of human migration, which fundamentally characterizes the history of humanity. The project takes its origin from a story written by the author and is an ideal journey backward in the history of mankind. Starting from the present day, where the concept of migration is mainly identified with the movement by sea, up to the dawn of the first evidence of the journey by land. Through the testimony of the protagonists of some stories of migration, the analysis of the theme in other fields, such as human geography, geopolitics, archaeology, and anthropology, the author produces images identified as pertinent to a journey, still in progress, which has lasted for about two million years. The aim of this work is to offer a vision of the emotional complexity of the migratory issue, in an attempt to transfer it as a peculiar characteristic, as positive and necessary for a harmonious subsistence, offering a new key of interpretation, which goes beyond the prejudices and stereotypes about the foreigner, the occupant and the fears usually associated with this figure. Trying to obstruct human travel by land and sea would mean arresting the process of physical, cultural, social, and technological evolution aimed at developing new balances.