 So Roland, why did you want to document the International Space Station? Well, it's probably the most sophisticated facility, spaceships, however you want to refer to it. It's all those things that his everything built. And unfortunately it will not last forever, it's at some point it will be decommissioned and probably taken apart and brought up in the atmosphere. And that could be 10 years from now, that could be 20 years from now. So I thought it was important to preserve that facility through photographs that are a little bit different than photographs of you folks. Most of the photographs taken are looking back at Earth, which makes perfect sense. The other photographs, I see a lot of photographs of people doing things on the station. I want to actually go on and photograph the physical attributes of the station. In this matter where it gets part documentary, part abstract interpretation of things. Because I think it's important that we understand what the facility is, what it's like to be on the facility. And the importance of the research that's going on out there, I think the bigger import is actually how it can inspire people in the future. Also somebody could go to Rome today and walk into their Colosseum, a 2,000-year-old piece of architecture. But it cannot happen with space stations that come down. So this is a good way to capture the memory, the feeling, and let it there for the future. So Paolo, what was it about my proposal and my project that interested you? Well, it came through a good friend of mine, an astronaut, Katie Coleman, who was, I understand, she was kind of working with you since a long time. And Katie knew about my passion as a photographer. I took many pictures, I was in space for about six months, and she knows that in space, I have a camera and I'm taking pictures. And I thought, as you said earlier, we take a lot of pictures of the Earth and everywhere else, but we don't think in terms of technical pictures from an artistic point of view, a little bit because this is not our capabilities, and also from a presentation point of view. So to look at the station from this point of view, it was an interesting project for me, it was an interesting idea, and I thought I would benefit from finally working with a professional that is going to tell me what to do instead of me going around and taking pictures.