There is more time than life is a project born from the desire to tell the story of the bond that unites wild nature and the inhabitants of my region, the Aosta Valley.
In every street, in every home and office there is a reminder of the peaks that are most difficult to reach, of the wolf that is often feared but also cared for and reintegrated into nature if injured, of the animals that are photographed but never approached to avoid contaminating their condition of freedom, and of the studies that are carried out to understand the diseases that can contaminate humans and animals and vice versa.
This project has allowed me to reflect on the possibility of experiencing a different kind of nature, one that is capable of caring for the inhabitants of this valley in the same way that many parents educate their children, with the right distance to let them make mistakes and learn, but always providing a safe haven to return to in case of need.
In the same way, the care that humans exercise for the lives of wild animals (through processes of reception, care and reintegration into nature) and respect for unspoiled landscapes are an occasion for silent exchange and respect.
A culture that is difficult to ignore, if well observed and told by the people who inhabit this area and whom I had the opportunity to meet.