donderdag 16 augustus 2018

Views & Reviews THE EVERYDAY LIFE TRANSFORMED Veramente Guido Guidi Photography


Guido Guidi Veramente

Veramente encompasses Italian photographer Guido Guidi’s entire oeuvre, bringing together excerpts of his series from 1959 to the present day to illuminate the distinctive photographic language he has forged over a 40-year career.

Guidi, a pioneer of new Italian landscape photography, was influenced by architectural history, neorealist Italian film, and conceptual art. Using photography as a process and an experience of understanding, Guidi’s body of work frames a visual discourse that revolves around what it means to see, or what it may mean to offer up an image.

Veramente is published to accompany a touring exhibition of the same name opening at the Fondation Henri Cartier-Bresson in January 2014, and then moving to Huis Marseille Museum voor Fotografie, Amsterdam in June and the Museo d’Arte della Città, Ravenna in October.

Guido Guidi was born in Cesena, Italy, in 1941. He studied in Venice at the University Institute of Architecture (now IUAV), where he followed the courses of Bruno Zevi, Carlo Scarpa and Mario De Luigi, and at the Advanced Course in Industrial Design with Italo Zannier and Luigi Veronesi.


Guido Guidi, Veramente
By Loring Knoblauch / In Photobooks / July 29, 2014

JTF (just the facts): Published in 2014 by MACK Books (here). Paperback, 172 pages, with 121 black and white and color photographs. Includes texts by Marta Dahó and Agnès Sire. The monograph is also the catalog for a retrospective exhibit, with 2014 stops at the Fondation Henri Cartier-Bresson (here), the Huis Marseille Museum voor Fotografie (here), and the Museo d’Arte della città di Ravenna (here). (Spread shots below.)

Comments/Context: Given the dramatic influence that urban and suburban sprawl has had on American societal development and the large number of extremely talented photographers (New Topographics branded and other) who have chronicled this massive post war expansion, we often tend to have the blindered, myopic view that ours is the only place in the world that has gone through these kinds of wrenching architectural and environmental transformations. Of course, that conclusion is patently false, and great photographers from all over the globe (particularly the UK, Germany, Japan, and more recently China) have investigated the seen and unseen consequences of rapid economic expansion, watching carefully as the old has been incrementally supplanted by the new. For many of us, we haven’t often thought about this process in a more integrated global fashion, comparing results from alternate geographies and artists to look for commonalities and differences, both in the ways the physical built environment has evolved and in the variety of artistic approaches being applied to capturing the ongoing changes.

The Italian photographer Guido Guidi has spent a forty year career observing the exurban evolution in his own native landscapes (and in other nearby European locales), and this retrospective volume provides a succinct summary of his thoughtful approach to documenting the kind of overlooked, marginal places we have become accustomed to finding here in America. His story begins in the early 1970s, with rich, squared off black and white views of vernacular suburban architecture (multi-unit concrete or stucco buildings), stylistically reminiscent of the frontal geometric formality of Lewis Baltz or Judy Fiskin. By the mid 1990s, he had transitioned to small format color, stepping back and capturing overlapped layers of open streets, vacant lots, ugly apartment blocks, and decayed infrastructure, often with an eye for new covering old or groups of people caught in some in-between space, interrupted by a telephone pole (like Lee Friedlander), a cast shadow, or a parked car. More recent images have moved on to large format color, diving deeper into the lush textures of rotting planks, faded plastic crates, stained walls, rusted oil drums, and stray dogs, with worm’s eye views of the sidewalk bringing us right down into the gutter, where every loose pebble becomes an item of interest.

Interleaved with this consistent look at Italian transitional landscapes has been an ongoing conceptual investigation of the elemental nature of photography, from experiments with light and shadow to multi-image time elapsed series. Early black and white works find him playing with sequential diptychs, pushing us into the dilated space between the turning of a newspaper page, the arrival of a wave at the beach, or the twist of perspective looking up at a ceiling light. By later in the 1970s, Guidi had colonized abandoned John Divola-like rooms, making ephemeral diptychs as the sun cast parades of ever changing angular shadows through the windows. After his transition to large format color, he reprised some of these same themes, moving outdoors to track light as it crossed a wet underpass, a muddy rooftop, and an intrepid clump of grass on a sun baked walkway. Each pairing is a meditative investigation of transient fluidity, of subtly changing mood in otherwise fixed circumstances.

Seen together, the two picture making methodologies inform each other more than we might normally expect. With Guidi’s time series works in my head, his undefined, empty suburban spaces started to look less like lucky snapshots or formally composed individual observations, and more like points in a larger continuum of broad thinking about societal transformation. Minute changes across textural surfaces show us one kind of close up evolution, while faded signs, torn posters, and cannibalized architecture tell us something similar about the molting surfaces of our cities.

While many of the New Topographics photographers easily edged into hectoring, caustic tones, Guidi never wavers from straightforward realism – a dose of quiet visual humor now and again, yes, but never outright irony or intentional lecturing. His results are less stark and more contemplative than his contemporaries, providing a look at neglected landscape spaces that encourages slow, deliberate investigation to uncover its nuances. For all their wasteland ugliness, these pictures never feel discouraging. Instead, they feel attentive and reflective, their judgments left open ended.

Collector’s POV: Guido Guidi is represented by Pedro Alfacinha in Lisbon (here), but I was unable to discover any US agent. His work has very little secondary market history here or in London/Paris, so gallery retail likely remains the best option for those collectors interested in following up.

Guido Guidi "Veramente", 2014. Photograph: Courtesy Mack

“THERE ARE THINGS I DO NOT LIKE IN THIS WORLD. I COULD BE IRONIC, BUT I’M VERY CAREFUL NOT TO BE.”

GUIDO GUIDI VERAMENTE

Two dogs snoozing away on a greyish dust road. Fenced in horses next to high piles of wooden pallets. Or a man reading a newspaper in a café. Banal situations which at first glimpse don’t offer much to take a photograph of. Not so for Italian photographer Guido Guidi.

As the recently published retrospective of his 40-year-career titled “Veramente” shows, Guido Guidi broke with the rules of what had generally been considered “photographable” up to the 1960’s.

As Marta Dahó writes in her accompanying words of the book:

“THE CONCEPT OF THE LANDSCAPE GRADUALLY MUTATED, VEERING TOWARDS A NEW FOCUS ON SPACES AND TERRITORIES THAT HAD PREVIOUSLY BEEN DEEMED UNDEFINED OR MARGINAL, RATHER THAN MORE CANONICAL SITES.”

Guido Guidi Veramente
Atri, Italie, 05.2003 © Guido Guidi

“SILENT WITNESSES OF A LANDSCAPE UNDERGOING PROFOUND CHANGES.”

The dominant subject matter throughout Guido Guidi’s work is territorial transformation. Born near the city of Cesena in the northern part of Italy in 1941, Guidi has dedicated a great part of his oeuvre to documenting the changes in that area.

His images are silent witnesses of a landscape undergoing profound changes: Once an agricultural area on the edge of a suburb and now traversed by a highway.

The artist himself once referred to his photographs as “ugly”. But he doesn’t care.

His approach to photography is a reflection of his character. Unpretentious and observant.

Agnès Sire puts it like this in her afterword to “Veramente”:

“WHAT HE LOOKS AT IS THE EVERYDAY LIFE AROUND HIM, BUT ONE WHICH IS BEING TRANSFORMED, REGARDLESS OF WHERE HE IS.”

Guido Guidi’s images don’t offer explanations. He shows reality. A reality formed and shaped by changes either so subtle that most are people not even aware of them. Or they don’t wish to pay attention to them thus avoiding to think about the consequences of what little changes – seemingly insignificant when looked at individually  – might add up to in the long run.

Guidi’s photographs are sober and stripped down to the core reminders of “what’s there” or “what’s real” – veramente.

More information about Guido Guidi “Veramente”
“Veramente” by Guido Guidi (2014): Published by MACK with an essay by Marta Dahó and an afterword by Agnès Sire.

Guido Guidi Veramente
Guido Guidi “Veramente”, 2014. Photograph: Courtesy Mack
 




















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