I can't leave things as they are.
This has been true since I was a child destroying Lego builds to start over, and it's how I approach work now: find what's broken, take it apart, build something new.
I started my path as an illustrator, because I was obsessed with how ideas become worlds and how stories shape behavior. I gradually shifted towards communication design, new emerging technologies, human-computer interaction and business development, with a strong interest in information design and speculative scenarios: tools for imagining futures and then reverse‑engineering how to get there.
My work now lives at the intersection of design, business and technology, shaped by years spent between Italy, France, and Finland, three cultures that taught me how context rewrites meaning and how every system carries its own logic.
I split my time between studying International Design Business Management at Aalto University, running a startup called Fibra and helping founders turn ambitious ideas into tangible realities. Lately, I’ve been studying how AI can help humans be more human: not by replacing our work, but by reshaping the future of work itself.
Problems motivate me more than anything else. I look for them everywhere.
Someone who sees what's broken, builds a solution, tests it, fails, retries, and iterates will get further than someone waiting for approval or perfect training.
“Make something wonderful and put it out there”.