about%252Bme.jpg

The story that started it all

My passion for photography started long ago, in the year 1995 to be precise. My first camera was a plastic 35mm konika point-and-shoot that I found buried in the snow on my High School graduation trip to Bariloche (Argentina) in La Patagonia.

After shooting my first 35mm roll (36exp), I recall having to wait what felt like the longest hour of my life outside the lab to see the final results. Amazed by the fine art that I felt I just created (well… at least that’s what I thought at that time) I haven’t stopped following my passion since.

The Artist

Juan Busciglio It’s an Argentinean Mixed Media Artist and Fine Art Landscape Photographer. He was born in Rosario, Argentina in the seventies and since early childhood he has loved drawing and painting.

My photography philosophy.

 

In my photography I try to show and capture the mood of the scenery, I tend not to remove or add anything. My goal is to get the image as close as possible to what I’m seeing. A good photograph is knowing where to stand, like Ansel Adams used to say.

My camera is just an instrument, when arrive to a place I let the landscape speak to me, I let it show me where to stand.


For me, photography is more than capturing a moment—it's about expressing a feeling. I work with multiple exposures, textures, and sometimes painting, layering each element to explore that space between what we see and what we sense. It’s where memory, dream, and reality all start to overlap.

I don’t follow a strict formula. The process is intuitive—each image begins with several exposures that I carefully blend together. From there, I add textures or painterly touches to give the image depth and emotion. It’s like building a visual story from fragments, letting them guide me as they come together.

At the heart of it, I’m not trying to show the world exactly as it is. I’m trying to share how it feels in a specific moment—how light, time, and place can stir something inside us. My goal is to create images that feel reflective, layered, and a little bit dreamlike—open for others to experience in their own way.