Sicily: An Island of Paradoxes

Sicily: An Island of Paradoxes



I
am a visual designer and photographer from Germany, currently
living and working in Paris. I hope my
photography offers an informal and honest view of what I find
beautiful, what I find ugly or what I find beautiful because it is
ugly. I try to focus on details that others may have missed.

The easiest way get around Sicily is by car. It’s a place that
needs to be discovered with keen eyes and sturdy feet. I began at
Mount Etna and made my way to the white rocks at Scala dei Turchi,
stopping in Castelmola,
Taormina
and Agrigento. The rough landscape and clear-blue
waters are juxtaposed with crumbling churches and ancient ruins.
It’s a paradoxical island which seems to have a magnetic energy
stemming from its rich and sometimes chequered past.

Mount Etna is one of the highest active volcanoes in Europe and
a physical embodiment of the melting pot of cultures on the island
– Italics, Greeks, Romans, Byzantines, Saracens, Normans, Swabians,
Aragonese, Lombards, Spaniards, French and Albanians – all of whom
contribute to Sicily’s unique DNA.

Traces of the mafia are everywhere, from the mounds of rubbish
piled up in the streets to the black facades of polluted buildings.
It’s a very traditional place; you can feel it in towns, on the
beaches and in the mountains. Locals seem to connect not only with
each other but with the landscape too. This intertwining of nature
and tradition is, for me, what makes Sicily so mesmerising.

@yasmingross.photo | www.yasmingross.photo

Discover More
Earthly Pleasures: A Journey Through the Stomach of Sicily with Chef Emilia Strazzanti