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de Lellis Gallery is pleased to announce Paesaggio:
a multi-artist exhibition of vintage black and white Italian landscape
photography. The exhibition opens December 1st and continues through
February 12th.
For generations
Italy’s awesome landscape has inspired and challenged photographers.
Whether cold and abstract or warm and brimming with humanity, their
images celebrate Italy’s geographical glory. The subjects,
mostly views of the northern rural, coastal, and urban terrain,
capture the landscape in every kind of light - from fields at dawn
to forests of the night.
In the
decades following World War II, impassioned Italian photographers
devoted themselves to photographing their country. During the same
era, filmmakers produced some of the most important art of the period
- the neo-realist masterpieces that are the great touchstones of
modern cinema. Film director Martin Scorcese’s comments on
the neo-realists could equally apply to their contemporaries in
photography: “desperate to redefine themselves after 20 years
of fascism and the devastation of war.”
The pictures
that are most reminiscent of neo-realist films are some moody urban
landscapes by Mario Carrieri and Mario Finocchiaro. Their photographs
embody the emotional texture in the atmosphere of a dreary, gray
Milan. While Carrieri’s cold, grainy pictures reveal the
isolation and melancholy of life amongst the gritty urban sprawl,
Finocchiaro’s soft-focus images dreamily recollect the romance
and solitude of a modern city’s industrial vistas.
Alberto
Galducci, a recently rediscovered 1950s Florentine photographer,
was at the forefront of contemporary theory in photography with
both complex and minimalist abstractions. His highly organized pictures
of Florence from the early 1950s contemplate the panorama of a world
from varying perspectives. The unconventional vision that Galducci
experimented with still looks fresh over 50 years later.
Mario
Giacomelli’s photographs from the 1970s push the medium to
its limits. Giacomelli, a visionary and one of Italy’s most
important and well-recognized photographers of the 20th century,
is famous for his landscape abstractions. He created powerful linear
and abstract earth designs from an airplane. He was known to manipulate
his pictures by altering the landscape pattern with a rented tractor,
and also would occasionally draw in details on the negative. To
Giacomelli, the earth was his canvas.
On exhibit
are more than 48 images by 16 photographers: Antonio Amaduzzi, Giuseppe
Bruno, Carlo Caligaris, Augusto Cantamessa, Mario Carrieri, Romeo
Casadei, Stanislao Farri, Mario Finocchiaro, Guido Fumo, Alberto
Galducci, Mario Giacomelli, Natale Gucci, Osvaldo Savoini, Tullio
Stravisi, Roberto Tessaroli, and Giovanni Vanoni.
It is
evident from the scope and quality of this work that Italy’s
photography community was a flourishing and vital scene beginning
in the mid-twentieth century. During these years, photographers
consistently made interesting and technically perfect images that
were both fascinating to behold and impressive for their intelligence
and ingenuity. From the straight to the experimental, Italians created
modern images that resonate like a distant memory.
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