Ludovica Limido
Winter 2026 Cycle – Photography
Italy @lludosphotos
The Feral Cat Friend of the Desert Fox
2025-2026
This project began as an investigation into my home and family, starting from an archive of photographs taken by my mother when she was my age — mostly images of animals.
My parents are hoteliers, and I grew up inside the hotel they built, a place where private life and work have always overlapped. What began as a small family business gradually expanded, slowly erasing the boundary between domestic and professional space.
Animals were a constant presence in this environment. Years before I was born, my mother brought home a disabled puma cub that had been rejected by its mother and was being cared for by a veterinarian friend. At the time, her dog had just had puppies, and my mother attempted to have the dog nurse the puma as well. It worked, and the cub lived with my parents inside the hotel for nine years.
As a child, my living situation fascinated other children, who imagined many adventures. Yet it often made me feel uneasy when entering houses that appeared more “normal.”
In this work, the hotel becomes a stage where identity and belonging are continuously negotiated. Photographing the hotel and its transformations, the small apartment where my parents live, the animals around us, and my family, I construct a study that weaves together observation, memories, dreams, and reconstructed moments.
The project questions why we construct the idea of home and how it becomes tied to assumptions of normality, family, and motherhood. It reflects on the concept of “child” — someone who, by definition, belongs to a parent — and explores how domestic spaces shape identity, belonging, and the traces of personal and inherited histories and traumas.
Artist Statement Biography
This project began as an investigation into my home and family, starting from an archive of photographs taken by my mother when she was my age — mostly images of animals.
My parents are hoteliers, and I grew up inside the hotel they built, a place where private life and work have always overlapped. What began as a small family business gradually expanded, slowly erasing the boundary between domestic and professional space.
Animals were a constant presence in this environment. Years before I was born, my mother brought home a disabled puma cub that had been rejected by its mother and was being cared for by a veterinarian friend. At the time, her dog had just had puppies, and my mother attempted to have the dog nurse the puma as well. It worked, and the cub lived with my parents inside the hotel for nine years.
As a child, my living situation fascinated other children, who imagined many adventures. Yet it often made me feel uneasy when entering houses that appeared more “normal.”
In this work, the hotel becomes a stage where identity and belonging are continuously negotiated. Photographing the hotel and its transformations, the small apartment where my parents live, the animals around us, and my family, I construct a study that weaves together observation, memories, dreams, and reconstructed moments.
The project questions why we construct the idea of home and how it becomes tied to assumptions of normality, family, and motherhood. It reflects on the concept of “child” — someone who, by definition, belongs to a parent — and explores how domestic spaces shape identity, belonging, and the traces of personal and inherited histories and traumas.
This project began as an investigation into my home and family, starting from an archive of photographs taken by my mother when she was my age — mostly images of animals.
My parents are hoteliers, and I grew up inside the hotel they built, a place where private life and work have always overlapped. What began as a small family business gradually expanded, slowly erasing the boundary between domestic and professional space.
Animals were a constant presence in this environment. Years before I was born, my mother brought home a disabled puma cub that had been rejected by its mother and was being cared for by a veterinarian friend. At the time, her dog had just had puppies, and my mother attempted to have the dog nurse the puma as well. It worked, and the cub lived with my parents inside the hotel for nine years.
As a child, my living situation fascinated other children, who imagined many adventures. Yet it often made me feel uneasy when entering houses that appeared more “normal.”
In this work, the hotel becomes a stage where identity and belonging are continuously negotiated. Photographing the hotel and its transformations, the small apartment where my parents live, the animals around us, and my family, I construct a study that weaves together observation, memories, dreams, and reconstructed moments.
The project questions why we construct the idea of home and how it becomes tied to assumptions of normality, family, and motherhood. It reflects on the concept of “child” — someone who, by definition, belongs to a parent — and explores how domestic spaces shape identity, belonging, and the traces of personal and inherited histories and traumas.

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