
Private Sphere
Private Sphere is a series born from my interest in the everyday, unguarded moments that unfold in the intimate spaces of daily life. Through careful photography and subtle reworking, I aim to give presence to gestures and scenes that are familiar yet often overlooked — the quiet rhythm of morning routines, a paused moment of pause, a glance shared between people.
My intention is not simply to document these moments, but to make them resonate — inviting the viewer to slow down, reflect, and find in the ordinary a deeper sense of emotion and connection. What might seem mundane becomes a space where memory, perception, and personal narrative quietly converge.




"Woman in bed"
Size : 100x73 cm
"The talk"
Medium : Photography
Size : 120x63 cm
Medium : Photography




"The kiss"
Size : 150x68 cm
"The late talk"
Medium : Photography
Size : 120x65 cm
Medium : Photography




"Getting dressed"
Size : 100x100 cm
"The girl in her room"
Medium : Photography
Size : 120x70 cm
Medium : Photography
Limited Edition of 7




"The breakfast"
Size : 120x82 cm
"La pausa libro"
Medium : Photography
Size : 75x100 cm
Medium : Photography




"The lunch break"
Size : 120x90 cm
"The dinner"
Medium : Photography
Size : 120x63 cm
Medium : Digital painting
About the work
In Private Sphere, Furio Torracchi turns his lens toward the intimate environments of everyday life, capturing moments that unfold within the domestic realm — from quiet morning rituals to gestures shared between people in their own rooms. The series deliberately foregrounds familiar experiences while refracting them through careful framing and subtle digital manipulation, allowing the images to hover between representation and semi-abstraction. This approach draws attention not so much to what is shown as to how it feels to inhabit these private moments, inviting viewers to recognize their own echoes within the images.
Across the works — whether titled The Breakfast, Getting Dressed, or The Lunch Break — Torracchi cultivates a visual language that balances intimacy and distance. The scenes are grounded in tangible everyday actions, yet the treatment of form and light gives them a contemplative, almost poetic presence, encouraging a reflective engagement rather than simple observation. In doing so, Private Sphere becomes a meditation on the quiet rhythms of life and the layered complexity of personal space, where ordinary gestures reveal deeper emotional and perceptual resonance.
