Cambodia Notes.

Travelling from the capital Phnom Penh to Mondulkiri, the land of elephants

A land between history and nature

Cambodia is a country where if you look at a person one second too long they smile at you. And that is enough to feel at peace.
S21, in Phnom Penh, was the most crucial detention and torture centre of the Khmer Rouge regime.
The profession of a photojournalist is made up of encounters and relationships with the world one knows and the world one changes.
An elephant strides slowly through the foliage of the trees, guided by its Mahut in an almost liturgical silence.
Kaoh Trong: a 10 km island resting on a sandbank in the middle of the Mekong. Two ancient pagodas, rice fields, banana trees, and pomelos.
Silence in Cambodia is not just a lack of noise, it is much more. The friendliness of people is a form of silence.
The photojournalist is hungry. And this is where synesthesia comes in. And you feel it in your hands, in your head.
Tarantulas are one of the most characteristic dishes of Cambodian cuisine and also a powerful elixir of beauty - they say.
A small Cham community. Muslim fishermen living on the banks of the Mekong, opposite the glittering Riverside of Phnom Penh.
The first day of the Cambodia journey: from the capital to the wilds of Mondulkiri, discovering a country and its people.
In Sen Monorom, Mondulkiri, coexistence between humans and elephants is not easy and is based on a precarious equilibrium.
During the monsoon season, the landscapes take on dreamlike dimensions, and the constant flat light puts a photographer to the test.
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