A veil of mystery covers the shots of Irene Gittarelli, a photographer and visual artist from Turin based in Padua. Photography has always been within her plans, first graduating from the Albertina Academy of Fine Arts in Turin and then attending the Master of Photography at the Brera Academy in Milan.
Her artistic production deals with themes such as human frailty and the relationship between man and the landscape around him, not surprisingly often influenced by the humanities, art and cinema.
Irene Gittarelli’s photographs are compositions in which elegance and mystery come together through a calibrated balance of light and shadow. These contrasts between light and dark blend perfectly with the light of the sunset, a recurring element in her compositions, which symbolizes a deep sense of hope.
One can sense from the images the photographer’s ability to connect with the subject she is shooting, a connection that is somehow imprinted in the photo. Discover Irene Gittarelli’s work on her website and Instagram profile.
“Nude is the most beautiful art form”
How can we really feel close to the subjects represented in works of art? It would be magic to think that the paintings in the museums can speak to us, tell us what they want to communicate and what the characters are living, many times described only through the pen of some art historian. However, we have one thing in common with Venuses or knights: the body. The great masters of art have represented feelings through the body, described for what it was, centuries ago as today. Anastasia Mihaylova‘s shots connect this union between the naked body of the present and the past, described in works of art. It is a close relationship, in which intimacy is not involved, where complicity is enclosed in the naked beauty of bodies, the most beautiful art form according to the photographer. That of Anastasia Mihaylova is an exercise that through photography also wants to denounce censorship in contemporary art, which recently deleted the artist’s social profiles. Instagram’s discrimination against certain creatives is a central theme of Mihaylova’s recent production. With “Nude is the most beautiful art form” the photographer wants to highlight the beauty of art and the body as inspiration and harmony of form. The naked body is an important aspect throughout the history of painting and sculpture, a model to be copied in the atelier or to represent the divine purity. Three women share the scene and the relationship with the works hanging on the walls of a museum, a choreography, an act of courtship but also a framed mirror in which to see themselves.
A shot by Anastasia Mihaylova will be on display at Collater.al Photography 2022.
Locked in his laboratory at John Hopkins University in Baltimore, Meryland, optical physics professor Robert W. Wood was working on an experiment aimed at replicating the way fish saw underwater. It was 1906, and his tools were a bucket full of water, a pinhole camera, a mirror glass, and plenty of light, essential paraphernalia that would not prevent Wood from discovering and inventing what would become known in the history of photography as the fish-eye. After its first uses in science, the image distortion created with the fish-eye will become perfect for representing in photography the hippie psychedelia of the 1960s and the rock rebellion in the years to follow. Hip-hop will use the fish-eye aesthetic for album covers and videos, as will sports, leveraging its ability to best capture the energy of freestyle and outdoor disciplines.
In 1911 Robert W. Wood succeeded in publishing “Phisical Optics,” the book collecting his research in optics, but the fish-eye still remained for a long time an exclusive for scientists stooped over test tubes and microorganisms. It was not until 1935 that a patent was filed for a circular lens that used glass and not water as the distorting surface. The patent was filed sharing with the Japanese company Nikon, but again it took more than two decades before the discovery became affordable. Perhaps it is too much to say “affordable,” since the first lens put on sale in 1957 cost $27,000. The final arrival in stores five years later delivered the fish-eye to the artistic, musical, sports and journalistic culture of the 1900s, now that at last even amateur or semiprofessional photographers could take pictures with that particular 180-degree view.
Immediately beginning in the 1960s, photographers made important political and artistic portraits and reports, witnessing historical events such as American elections or the albums of great artists such as the Beatles and Rolling Stone; it was in ’66 that the cover of Big Hits (High Tide and Green Grass) in which Mick Jagger and Keith Richards of the Rolling Stones are shot with the fish-eye. Crossing the fish-eye story is not just rock. The psychedelic ’60s and hippies could replicate with the wide-angle lens the distortion of reality caused by hallucinogens, while hip-hop, starting in the ’90s, that ability to have a more street, irreverent, and if necessary funny point of view, in which the on-camera looks of artists such as Notorius B.I.G., Beastie Boys, and Busta Rhymes were enhanced even more. Panoramic views of breathtaking locations and even the first photos taken on Mars, the fish-eye has a history that has taken it from being a scientific marvel to a peephole through which to look at more than half a century of artistic and cultural history.
The balance between the human figure and the landscape is the key to Lisa Strautmann‘s shots. Born in 1988, Lisa Strautmann is a German photographer who has had a different path than many of her colleagues. In fact, she has earned no less than two degrees, neither of them in the arts or photography: the first in physical education and the second in psychology.
Her course of study, however, led her to have the approach she has today to the photographic medium and the subjects she shoots. We almost always see one or more figures in the center of the composition, naked, in unnatural and contrived poses. All around are the colors of nature, from the bright green of the grass to the clear blue of the sky.
With these images, Lisa Strautmann manages to merge her being an adult, feminist woman with a deep love for nature and the connection humans can make with it.
Discover more of Lisa Strautmann’s work on her website and Instagram profile.
Photography, when it wants to convey universal emotions, has more strength when it is shared with other people from its earliest stages. Tatiana Cardellicchio owes much to meeting and collaborating with other creatives, who have inspired her, reinforcing an already clear idea of art that is enhanced when seen as a whole and not as individual shots. There is often a human figure in Tatiana Cardellicchio’s photos, isolated in the world in a moment of pause, in which the perpetual motion of life seems to have been interrupted in favor of a more meditative relationship with nature and the elements that make it up.
The sea becomes a kind of baptismal water, the blades of grass in the meadow instead the perfect surface in which to abandon the body, often of a young woman, which does not impose its silhouette in the landscape but adapts to the rocks or the stool left in the corner of the room. With a career as a photo retoucher and photo editor, the shots on the photographer’s Instagram profile show a more intimate look in which enhancing the plasticity of the body is a mission, as is blurring the edges between the human figure and nature, in a game of participation in the natural cycle that it is easy to want to be a part of.
A Tatiana Cardellicchio’s shot will be at Collater.al Photography 2022.
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