Spirit of Place: NAPLES

£20.00

Nestled between sea and stone, Naples and its surrounding wonders pulse with a rhythm both ancient and alive. This collection is a visual journal of my time immersed in the layered beauty of southern Italy—from the chaotic charm of Naples to the sun-washed serenity of Sorrento, Positano, Amalfi, Atrani and the islands of Ischia and Procida. Through everyday scenes, fleeting moments, and quiet corners, I’ve sought to capture not just what these places look like, but how they feel: textured, timeless, and endlessly vibrant. These images are an ode to the unseen details, the lived-in beauty, and the enduring spirit of a land where history and life unfold side by side.

A6 (10.5 x 14.8 cm) Book, 88 pages.

Nestled between sea and stone, Naples and its surrounding wonders pulse with a rhythm both ancient and alive. This collection is a visual journal of my time immersed in the layered beauty of southern Italy—from the chaotic charm of Naples to the sun-washed serenity of Sorrento, Positano, Amalfi, Atrani and the islands of Ischia and Procida. Through everyday scenes, fleeting moments, and quiet corners, I’ve sought to capture not just what these places look like, but how they feel: textured, timeless, and endlessly vibrant. These images are an ode to the unseen details, the lived-in beauty, and the enduring spirit of a land where history and life unfold side by side.

A6 (10.5 x 14.8 cm) Book, 88 pages.

Printed in the UK

Printed on recycled natural 170 gsm paper, they feel timeless yet portable, designed to be carried and lived with, while their pages invite personal notes and reflections, transforming each book into a companion on the journey.

About the project: Spirit of Place

Presented as a series of A6 travel sized books, each devoted to a single place, the project takes on a tactile, relic like quality. Spirit of Place continues Robby’s practice of privileging attention over spectacle and subtlety over declaration. Resisting the conventions of travel literature and guidebooks, which so often rely on narration and definition, the project treats photography as a primary mode of encounter—a way of engaging with place that allows atmosphere, rhythm, and texture to speak more eloquently than words.

The title draws on the ancient idea that every landscape possesses its own genius loci, or spirit—an essence sensed rather than explained. In these works, the camera lingers with fleeting impressions and overlooked details, framing travel not as description but as experience, inviting the viewer to discover their own meaning in what emerges.