Unfinished House

  • Dates
    2023 - Ongoing
  • Author
  • Topics Archive, Fine Art, Portrait
  • Location Buenos Aires, Argentina

The house my grandparents built, once home to four generations, now lies in ruins. As it empties, I reflect on memory, family, and legacy, salvaging fragments through art. Amid decay, memories endure—reminding life is fleeting, transformable, and fragile.

The house built by my grandparents, Lina and Genaro, Italian immigrants who arrived in Buenos Aires in the mid-20th century and settled in the Floresta neighborhood, was once the family home where my father, Hugo, was born and died, and—in part—where I also grew up. Memories were forged inside that resonate in my memory, a past that, like the walls of the house, has crumbled over time. Today, none of them are with me, and the house has become a pure ruin, a skeleton of what was once a home.

As a witness to loss and the passage of time, I reflect on the memory of places, family memories and their fragility, as well as the profound responsibility of what remains and the connections that persist. The house is about to be demolished, and everything seems to be coming to an end. I wonder: how do you keep a memory alive when everything that represents it is being lost? As the house began to empty, I felt that emptiness mirrored within me. Questions that hadn't been formed before emerged: I looked to the past and asked myself, "Who were we?" "What legacy do I carry?" Four generations lived in this house, and now I find myself wondering, "Who do I want to be in the future?" "Do I really want to start a family?"

For years, the bond with my father was broken. However, before he died, we were able to reconnect. Over time, I realized that even beneath the ruins, it's possible to salvage something valuable. Thus, in the face of this radical transformation of the inhabited landscape, I collect fragments and explore the house's various surfaces, silent witnesses to family history: from the leaves of the tree my grandmother planted and now withering away, to the now-collapsed roofs and walls my grandfather built, and the shattered windows . I return to the printing trade my father began in this house—which over time ceased to be just a home and also became a printing press—and imprint a memory on each object through alternative photographic techniques. It's a way of resisting, of honoring a memory that—like the ruins—is on the verge of disappearing, recognizing myself in the family legacy in an attempt to keep alive the memories and emotions that once inhabited this place.

Like the ruins of the house and the images that dissolve in the light, my memory is made of fragments that, as they fade, remind me of the transience and fragility of what I've lived through. In the process, the debris becomes amulets, and I understand that there is no permanence, only transformation. There is no preservation, only metamorphosis.

© Yasmin Natalia Pesce - Image from the Unfinished House photography project
i

Digital photography, direct shot Seeking answers, I turned to bibliomancy and let the house speak. In the library, I took randomly a worn, coverless book: revealed to me one chronicle by Roberto Arlt titled Unfinished Houses. Also from Floresta neighborhood, Arlt described abandoned homes as symbols of failed dreams and mystery, where ruin is not emptiness but a language or code to be interpreted

© Yasmin Natalia Pesce - Image from the Unfinished House photography project
i

Digital photography taken directly from rubble with image transfer.The roof my grandfather built with his own hands succumbed to the passage of time. Today, in the present, it is my hands that, with a delicate, almost caressing gesture, transfer the images from the family album to the rubble.In this act, the album is reconstructed differently: no longer as ordered pages, but as scattered traces.

© Yasmin Natalia Pesce - Image from the Unfinished House photography project
i

Digital photography with image projection on a wall. My parents were married in this house; that day was the genesis of my story. Between the fallen walls, the light draws my mother entering the same door to remarry, and the house seems to sigh with the happiness they experienced that day.

© Yasmin Natalia Pesce - Image from the Unfinished House photography project
i

Digital photography taken directly from rubble with image transfer.The photographs are scattered among the remains, like seeds in the crevice of the ruin. The ground becomes a scattered archive, a broken map where memory insists on remaining.

© Yasmin Natalia Pesce - Image from the Unfinished House photography project
i

Direct shot digital photography Over time, I discovered that light has been another character in history. It has reprinted memories and superimposed layers of time.

© Yasmin Natalia Pesce - Digital photography to image projection on wall.
i

Digital photography to image projection on wall.

© Yasmin Natalia Pesce - Image from the Unfinished House photography project
i

Digital photography, taken directly from rubble with image transfer.I transfer photographs like caresses: faces that cling to dead matter, searching for a new body to inhabit.The remains are transformed into talismans, fragments of frozen time,echoes of those happy vacation days that insist on remaining.

© Yasmin Natalia Pesce - Image from the Unfinished House photography project
i

Digital scan of an anthotype exposed to light for six weeksAmong the ruins, one object remains: “Benedici la nostra casa” — Bless our house. Made with beet pigments my grandmother once used in her kitchen, it reveals an image that fades into stains, echoing the fragility of memory and theinevitability of loss. Anthotypy is a photographic technique that use photosensitive plant pigments to print

© Yasmin Natalia Pesce - Image from the Unfinished House photography project
i

Digital photography, image projection on a wallMy mother looks at herself again in the same mirror from her wedding night.The reflection is repeated, but now she is surrounded by crumbling walls, something seems to shine even in the darkness

© Yasmin Natalia Pesce - Image from the Unfinished House photography project
i

Digital photography taken directly from leaves developed using chlorotype technology. Everything in the house seems about to disappear. The hibiscus tree my grandmother planted fell and began to dry out, but it still holds up: even horizontally, its leaves insist on blooming. From those leaves, I collect fragments to reconstruct another tree: the genealogical one.

© Yasmin Natalia Pesce - Image from the Unfinished House photography project
i

Digital photography, direct shotMy grandfather, who was also a blacksmith, welded those chairs.Four generations of us sat in them, sharing conversations under the tree. Today they're empty.I think about how many conversations were etched in their iron,how many laughs, silences, and even arguments took place there.

© Yasmin Natalia Pesce - Image from the Unfinished House photography project
i

Digital photography of dried leaves and chlorotypes. Memory—emotional, personal, familial, and also collective—is like that tree: a virtue that needs care. If it's not protected, it can wither, be lost, or rot. But if it's cared for, even in the fall, it can bloom again.

© Yasmin Natalia Pesce - Image from the Unfinished House photography project
i

Digital Photography direct shotThe plates we used at each shared meal hold their own cartography: cracks, marks, and the imprint of hands from cooking, vestiges of the wheat that crossed oceans.

© Yasmin Natalia Pesce - Image from the Unfinished House photography project
i

Digital photography, direct shotA map of Italy that my grandparents kept, with the south as the center, Calabria as the root.The doors of the house seem to detonate their own cartography, as if the intimate map of our memory were drawn in their cracks and thresholds.

© Yasmin Natalia Pesce - Image from the Unfinished House photography project
i

Digital photography, image projection onto a wall.In the 80s my father entered the world of printing. He bought his first machine and converted the house into a printing workshop, a profession he would practice until the end of his life. In the photo projected in the same room, my father is holding me next to the machine. And the house, amidst paper, ink, and rollers, became printer of our lives.

© Yasmin Natalia Pesce - Image from the Unfinished House photography project
i

Self-portrait, digital captureUnder the weight of a history that preceded me, the rubble reminds me that everything inherited leaves its mark, dark and light at the same time. I feel its weight with scars and the hope of redemption.

© Yasmin Natalia Pesce - Image from the Unfinished House photography project
i

Digital photography to wall projection. For a long time, my bond with my father was broken, and I regretted not photographing him enough. This project gave me a second chance to capture him. I feel like he carried pains he couldn’t heal with a hole in his chest, yet in the end, we found each other, revealing unconscious similarities. This photo is from his wedding with my mother.

© Yasmin Natalia Pesce - Image from the Unfinished House photography project
i

Selfportrait, digital shotMemory rises above the remains of our history: what hurts, what heals, and what endures, carrying with it the hope of rebirth. I carry that weight with me, sustaining what I inherited with scars and redemption. I understand that life's retrospective is made up of ruins, and I try to reconstruct my biography by looking to the past while searching for answers for my future

© Yasmin Natalia Pesce - Image from the Unfinished House photography project
i

Digital photography to cyanotype on glass. Broken glass still reflects my childhood.Before I was born, they were going to name me Blue; my father's hands were covered in cyan ink, and he couldn't get it out to leave for the hospital. Today, in cyanotype, I reproduce myself as blue, held by those distinctive inky hands.In the glass, I discover that the house exceeds what it contains

© Yasmin Natalia Pesce - Image from the Unfinished House photography project
i

Self-portrait, digital photography. With the transition to digital technologies, my father's hands stopped dyeing, but I clearly remembered that before he died, his nails had turned blue, a sign that the end was approaching. I take a self-portrait with his blue hands reflected in my chest, hoping that this legacy will continue and leave a lasting mark.

Unfinished House by Yasmin Natalia Pesce

Prev Next Close