Veronica is not very talkative when it comes to herself. "I would simply prefer to be known as Linearcurvature.", she warns. A graduate of Parsons School of Design in New York, she did not embrace the arts she had studied after leaving school until she started photography four years ago. "I ended up going into social work after graduating, and nobody really liked my photos, until one day my husband told me I should try again, after looking at my old work."


Through its photographs, Linearcurvature stages ghostly buildings. “I love how abundant and unique architecture is everywhere you go. It also changes with the light. I like simple, minimal things in life, so it's only natural that I try to find geometric shapes in the city, through architecture. […] I used to like newer, more modern buildings, but as I get older, I'm starting to appreciate brutalist architecture. You learn to appreciate the details: where the architect has placed objects and how light plays an important role.” And besides, why architecture? "When I was a child, I was always fascinated by airplanes, so naturally I would look up at the sky." As she leaves to study in New York, her eyes, searching for the heavens, are confronted by the architecture of the Big Apple. "Since then, I've found architecture fascinating, and I love the fact that so many stories are hidden behind the walls."


United States – Los Angeles





