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Photographer of excellence, and among the most appreciated in the
contemporary art scene, the Dutch photographer Erwin Olaf (1959) is
to be considered one of the greatest interpreters of modern
portrait photography: he is known all over the world for a
photographic style dominated by mysterious and contemplative
atmospheres, for his mise en scène and theatrical compositions. In
his shots Olaf weaves complex and dramatic narratives. His works
are striking in their strangeness, their will to provoke, their
sense of solitude and restlessness: they catch glimpses of truth,
which reveal the imperfection and the fictitious nature of an
apparently perfect world. This rich catalogue represents a journey
through the artist's entire production, offering a complete
overview of his work: from the beginning with Chessmen, the series
that made him internationally famous, awarded at the Young European
Photographer competition in 1988, up to the recent Palm Springs
project (2018). The volume includes a critical text by Walter
Guadagnini and a conversation with the artist. Text in English and
Italian.
Man Ray, surrealist master and exponent of the Dada movement,
managed to reinvent not only the photographic language, but also
the representation of the body and face, as well as the genres of
the nude and the portrait themselves. This book brings together
around 200 photographs produced from the 1920s right up to his
death in 1976, all featuring female subjects.Through rayographs,
solarisations and double exposures, the female body undergoes a
continual metamorphosis of forms and meanings, becoming an abstract
form, an object of seduction, classical memory or realistic
portrait, in endless playful and refined variations. Among the
protagonists of his shots are Lee Miller, Berenice Abbott, Dora
Maar and Juliet, a lifelong companion, to whom is dedicated the
amazing The Fifty Faces of Juliet portfolio (1943-1944). But these
women were, in turn, great artists: as evidence is presented here a
corpus of works dating back to the time - between the 1930s and
'40s - of their most direct association with Man Ray and with the
environment of the Dada avant-garde and Parisian surrealism. This
volume offers a wide survey of one of the most exuberant periods of
the 20th century, with authentic masterpieces of photographic art
such as the Electricite portfolios (1931) and the very rare Les
mannequins. Resurrection des mannequins (1938). Text in English and
Italian.
"In the depths of winter, I finally learned that within me there
lay an invincible summer." - Albert Camus The artistic direction of
the festival - Tim Clark and Walter Guadagnini - maintains the
poetic vocation of last year, taking inspiration for the theme of
the 2022 edition from a phrase by the great French writer Albert
Camus. At a time of great upheaval, a moment of transition and
growth that follows numerous extraordinary hardships and crises
that have now come to define our era, Camus's maxim gives us food
for thought about the inner forces that drive us as individuals in
what we do, in every moment of our lives. A principle that intends
to shed light on another facet of human nature; the ability to push
back against adversities, to not submit to momentary complications,
and of course, courage, without neglecting to mention the ability
to persist. The translation of these thematics into the language of
photography, and, by natural extension, visual culture at large,
focuses on the notion of resistance as well as the different
potential reactions to the onset of a new reality. Texts by: Walter
Guadagnini, Joan Fontcuberta, Jitka Hanzlova, Majoli, Mortarotti,
Luis Cobelo, Fratelli Henkin, Anna Szkoda Text in English and
Italian.
This volume is dedicated to the phenomenon of staged photography,
the trend that has revolutionised the photographic language since
the 1980s. Through over 100 works, the catalogue tells how
photography was able to reach the heights of fantasy and invention
between the end of the 20th and the beginning of the 21st-century,
previously almost exclusively entrusted to cinema and painting.
Goldfish invading bedrooms, icefalls in the desert, imaginary
cities, Marilyn Monroe and Lady D shopping together: all of this
can happen thanks to veritable stages set up in order to build a
parallel reality, or thanks to new technologies and, in particular,
through the increasingly sophisticated use of Photoshop, released
in 1990. Photography, the realm of documentation and (presumed)
objectivity becomes the realm of fantasy, invention and
subjectivity, completing the last decisive evolution of its
history. Works by: Jeff Wall, Cindy Sherman, James Casebere, Sandy
Skoglund, Yasumasa Morimura, Laurie Simmons, David Lachapelle,
Bernard Faucon, Eileen Cowin, Bruce Charlesworth, David Levinthal,
Paolo Ventura, Lori Nix, Miwa Yanagi, Alison Jackson, Julia
Fullerton Batten, Jung Yeondoo, Jiang Pengyi. Text in English and
Italian.
Francesco Bosso (born in Italy, 1959) is a well known Italian
interpreter of landscapes and primitive nature via the medium of
black and white photography. Bosso's extraordinary mastery of the
technique of shooting outdoors in a large format, and his
virtuosity in the darkroom, using the traditional analogue process,
allows him to obtain wonderful prints on gelatine silver paper,
which intensifies the cleanliness of the whites and the depth of
the tonal values and contrasts. Text in English and Italian.
The first extensive monograph dedicated to the work of Paolo
Ventura (Milan, 1968). Ventura has established himself in the field
of artistic photography, offering a singular and absolutely
original interpretation of staged photography, an art form in which
photography is the final product of a creative process which, in
his case, involves the preparation of scenarios and mannequins: the
latter, together with real characters among which the artist
himself often appears, are the protagonists of his stories. In
these three-dimensional settings Ventura recreates, and then fixes
through photography, a mental space that refers to the atmosphere
of “magical realism” and to the fairytale flavour of childhood,
generating a deliberately surreal contrast with the depth of some
topics involved (such as war, abandonment, memory, identity). The
volume offers an overall look at the artist’s 15 years of
activity, showcasing 21 series from 2005 to the present time,
highlighting the evolution of his language which, in addition to
photography, is also expressed through drawings. The monograph
includes critical texts by Walter Guadagnini and Francine Prose, an
interview with Ventura by Monica Poggi and biographical notes. Text
in English and Italian.
This third volume in Skira's History of Photography series serves
as a major reference in the field of photography. The third volume
(1941-1980) of the Skira History of Photography series considers
the years signed by the revolution of color that marked the start
of a radical change in the very nature of amateur photography. At
the same time, through photojournalism, photography became a mirror
of society and a tool for attempts to change it. This monograph
traces the historical evolution of photography, focusing on artists
such as Helen Levitt, Weegee, Robert Doisneau, Henri
Cartier-Bresson, Josef Sudek, William Klein, Robert Frank, Richard
Avedon, Shomei Tomatsu, William Eugene Smith, Gerhard Richter,
Bernhard and Hilla Becher, Ugo Mulas, Ed Ruscha, and Larry Clark,
just to name a few. The essays provide an in-depth discussion of
some of the primary themes of the historical period: the evolution
of documentary photography between 1950 and 1980, the color
revolution, and the relationship between photography and conceptual
art.
This book covers the last 20 years of artistic research by one of
the leading contemporary Italian photographers: Walter Niedermayr.
Through the recurring themes of his work such as Alpine landscapes,
architecture and the relationship between public and private
spaces, the artist's interest in investigating places not only from
a geographical but also from a social point of view is highlighted.
Although in continuity with the legacy of the Italian photographic
tradition, which views the landscape as the key to interpreting
society, Niedermayr's visual research is significant in terms of
its ability to reinterpret this subject and renew it from both a
conceptual and a formal point of view. For the South Tyrolean
photographer, physical space today cannot be approached with an
exclusively documentary intention, but as the pivot of a
transformative relationship between ecology, architecture and
society. In some of the works in the Alpine Landschaften (Alpine
Landscapes) series, for example, the presence of man in the
depiction of the landscape is interpreted as a parameter for
measuring the proportions of Alpine panoramas, and at the same time
as a political yardstick for his intervention in the metamorphosis
of the natural equilibrium. This topic is also underlined in works
such as Portraits, where the snow cannons filmed during the summer
season - and thus inactive - become ambiguous presences residing in
the landscape. Text in English and Italian.
Published on the occasion of the great exhibition staged at CAMERA
- Centro Italiano per la Fotografia - this volume retraces the
history and legend of 'paparazzi'. 'Paparazzi' is a photographic
and cultural phenomenon born during the years in which Rome was
considered 'Hollywood on the Tiber River'. The 120 images portray
the features of the protagonists of that season - especially the
divas and stars of the silver screen, in addition to the
photographs illustrating the wild nights in Via Veneto between the
1950s and 1960s. Photos by Tazio Secchiaroli, Marcello Geppetti,
Elio Sorci, Ron Galella and many other prominent figures of the
time make up (together with pages out of the magazines in which
they were published) a fresco of popular communication from back
then. Once the heroic season of paparazzi came to an end, that
language became a sort of code used in different artistic and
commercial contexts, as demonstrated in the final part of the
volume by the images of the leading names in today's photography
scene such as Alison Jackson, Armin Linke and Ellen von Unwerth.
Text in English and Italian.
The second volume in the Skira “Photography” series serving as
a major reference in the field. The 50 years of artistic and mass
photography taken into consideration in this volume are
unquestionably the most important in the twentieth century. The
acceleration of technological progress, the advent of the era of
the machine and the metropolis, the epoch-making economic crisis,
the dramatic aftermath of the collapse of the old
nineteenth-century order in Europe with political upheavals, wars,
revolutions and dictatorships, the first appearance of a mass
society capable of expressing cultures and systems of communication
in line with its needs: these are the most obvious stages of a
history that was also recorded as it happened, in various forms and
media. Among these, key importance certainly attaches to
photography. It is evident that mankind had never before been in
possession of an instrument capable of supplying such an enormous
number of images of such universal accessibility as regards both
visibility and creation. The Kodak camera, a device anyone could
use, and the popular illustrated press are the two cornerstones of
this aspect of the photographic history of the twentieth century.
This richly illustrated book – complete with synoptic tables and
a summary glossary – offers a wide-ranging survey of this era
that will delight and inform a constantly growing audience.
Stefano Cerio (*1962) directs his attention to alternative worlds:
for his elaborate series he takes pictures of recreational
paradises-ski arenas, cruises, water and fun parks. For the artist,
Italian street altars even count among these colorful illusory
worlds that people create for the purpose of escaping from everyday
life. Yet in his cool photographs Cerio without exception exposes
the fun rides and the adventure pools in the off-season and
therefore devoid of visitors; the ruptures, the bleakness, and the
senselessness that become visible behind the amusing facades. For
Chinese Fun, the photographer visited a whole range of recreational
parks, water landscapes, and sports grounds in Beijing, Shanghai,
Qingdao, and Hong Kong. His centrally organized compositions are
made with a plate camera and document selected absurd
arrangements-from a concrete fruit basket as large as a house to
the looped tracks of an enormous roller coaster in the interior
courtyard of an office complex. Exhibition: Fondazione VOLUME!,
Rome 23.9.-3.11.2015
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