In mythology, at the origin of archetypes, every principle contains its opposite. This was also true for the basic stories of Greek and Roman worship before modernity established a clear Cartesian distinction between the Apollonian and the Dionysian. In the Mediterranean culture of Mimmo Jodice, the two broken halves of the principle: the chthonic and the ethereal, vital breath and inanimate stasis, death and life, are brought back to the ambiguous unity of their origins. And photography is nothing but an esoteric ritual capable of renewing that ancient union. [...]