If you live in São Paulo, Brazil, you know that when Carnaval comes to town, the otherwise calm streets turn into the venue for a raucous, multi-day mass celebration. In the same way that residents are used to watching people partying in full force, festival-goers are equally aware that whether they’re making out with a stranger or sambaing like there’s no tomorrow, a slew of others are watching them from the windows or terraces of their tall, residential buildings. It was this annual, voyeuristic exchange that prompted photographer and visual artist Raissa Nosralla, AKA Lady Gaia, to point her camera in the opposite direction of the street towards the audience on high.