Moodboards

These moodboards date back to 2020, when I began creating them without any specific purpose—just for fun, to capture sets of images and abstract concepts that resonated with me. It was a way to collect my inspirations and give shape to my ideas in a spontaneous way.

The Game

For this moodboard, I drew inspiration from the idea of game, both in its literal sense and in a deeper, almost psychological interpretation. Elements like cards and chess pieces evoke games of chance and strategy, but they also symbolize the role-playing, seduction, and power dynamics we all engage in throughout life—like a card game where each player reveals or hides parts of themselves. I wanted to capture this sense of duality and human complexity, similar to David Fincher’s film The Game, where one becomes both actor and spectator of their own experience, caught between reality and illusion.


Hedi Slimane's rock aesthetic inspired me to infuse this moodboard with a rebellious, nonchalant edge, layered with raw and provocative sensuality. It’s a nod to unpredictability and risk, an invitation to explore dualities like vulnerability and seduction, strength and fragility within human relationships. In short, these games can be as much sources of pleasure as they are emotional challenges. Could life perhaps be nothing more than a playground? A theater where the rules are never entirely clear. There’s a subtle dimension of manipulation, of control and loss of control. This play of images oscillates between danger and excitement, questioning whether one is ready to risk everything to see the experience through to the end.


Love letter

This moodboard deeply and poetically explores the theme of love in its various facets, blending softness, passion, and melancholy. With references to literature (such as Lolita), intimate depictions of bodies, and handwritten notes, it resonates as an exploration of modern love—complex, intense, and sometimes painful. It shows both the ecstasy of love and the inevitable sadness of its end or its fragility. The visual elements evoke a love that is total, both physical and emotional, yet fleeting. 


The phrase, "Please don’t forget me and all the things we did," echoes the film Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind by Michel Gondry, which can also be seen in one of the images. The soft, blurred illustrations add a nostalgic touch, revisiting memories and significant moments in a relationship. I wanted to capture the complexity of human emotions by juxtaposing delicate images with symbols of passion and loss, representing a love that strives to be eternal in its intensity but is fully aware of its impermanence. 


There is a certain vulnerability here, a reminder of wounds, regrets, and memories that linger even after the end of a story. Each person chooses to remember either the good or the bad memories, which, in any case, can never be relived.