Luigi
Ghirri Project Prints
Curated by Elena Re
Mummery + Schnelle. Fondo di Luigi Ghirri
In collaboration with Galleria Massimo Minini
14 September - 5 November 2011 Private view
Wednesday 14 September, 6-8 pm |
 |
come pensare per immagini 1
Luigi Ghirri was a pioneer of contemporary colour photography.
His work from the early 1970s until his death in 1992 forms
part of a conceptual photographic tradition that shifted attention
away from the manual processes involved in creating an object
onto an examination of the nature of that object and its relation
to the reality recorded by photography.
A key to Ghirri’s artistic vision is provided by a passage
he wrote in response to the first photograph taken of the Earth
from Space by the Apollo 11 spacecraft in 1969 "...it held
within it all previous, incomplete images, all books that had
been written, all signs, those that had been deciphered and
those that had not. It was not only the image of the entire
world, but the only image that contained all other images of
the world: graffiti, frescoes, paintings, writings, photographs,
books, films. It was at once the representation of the world
and all representations of the world."
The meaning that Ghirri sought in his work was a verification
of the continued possibility to desire and look for a path of
knowledge; a way through a forest of images of man, things and
life in order to arrive at the precise identity of man, things
and life. The multiplicity of images incorporated in Ghirri’s
work needs to be viewed in this way. They were for him hieroglyphs
to be deciphered and interpreted on the way to an understanding
of reality.
In the early 1980s Ghirri started to use a medium format camera
producing larger negatives, clearly not for the sake of technique
itself, but as if to “get inside” the subject more
intensely. The centrality of thought and the sense of the project
continued to be the necessary conditions for his work during
those years, to such an extent that these negatives actually
turned out to be another project tool he could resort to. Thanks
to these matrices Ghirri was able to produce excellent contact
prints, small photographs that he could cut out, file and line
up in order to see each image, plan his series, organize his
own view, even leaving them loose and then bringing them together
again in endless combinations. These small photographs that
enabled Luigi Ghirri to organize his own view from the early
1980s until 1992 were the Project Prints.
Mummery + Schnelle is pleased to present Luigi Ghirri’s
Project Prints for the first time in the UK, in collaboration
with Galleria Massimo Minini. The exhibition has been curated
by Elena Re from the body of work held in the archives of the
Fondo di Luigi Ghirri. Elena Re has been engaged for a number
of years in the study and investigation of Ghirri’s work,
starting from his archives, and is preparing a book and a museum
exhibition on the Project Prints and on Luigi Ghirri’s
project vision.
Luigi Ghirri Project Prints will be both a journey
through Ghirri’s work and through Italy. During the 1980s
the concept of landscape became increasingly important for Ghirri.
He sought to create a new iconography of the Italian landscape,
one that could incorporate both tradition and modernity. In
the important series Paesaggio Italiano, many images
from which are included in this exhibition, Ghirri looked to
evoke a particular sense of place. He wrote, “I would
like this work on the Italian landscape to seem more about the
perception of a place than its cataloguing or description.”
Alongside Paesaggio Italiano, the work on show at Mummery
+ Schnelle will include images from other important series by
Ghirri, including Atelier di Giorgio Morandi, Architetture
di Aldo Rossi, Versailles and Il Palazzo dell’arte.
Luigi Ghirri (b. Scandiano, Reggio Emilia, 1943 – d. Roncocesi,
Reggio Emilia, 1992) worked as a photographer for over twenty
years, from 1970 to 1992. One of the most important and influential
figures in contemporary photography, he first started working
in the ambit of conceptual art, and his research soon attracted
international attention. In 1975 Time-Life included him among
the “discoveries” of its Photography Year, and he
showed at the Art as Photography – Photography as
Art exhibition at Kassel. In 1982 he was presented at the
Photokina in Cologne as one of the most significant artists
in the history of 20th-century photography. His works are held
in various institutions around the world, including the Stedelijk
Museum (Amsterdam), Musée-Château (Annecy), Musée
de la Photographie Réattu (Arles), Polaroid Collection
(Cambridge, Massachusetts), Musée Nicéphore Niépce
(Chalon-sur-Saône), Museum of Fine Arts (Houston), Museo
di Fotografia Contemporanea (Cinisello Balsamo, Milan), Archivio
dello Spazio – Amministrazione Provinciale (Milan), Galleria
Civica (Modena), Canadian Centre for Architecture – Centre
Canadien d’Architecture (Montréal), Museum of Modern
Art (New York), Cabinets des estampes – Bibliothèque
Nationale de France (Paris), Centre Pompidou (Paris), Fond National
d’Art Contemporain (Paris), Centro Studi e Archivio della
Comunicazione (Parma), Biblioteca Panizzi – Fototeca (Reggio
Emilia), Palazzo Braschi – Archivio Fotografico Comunale
(Rome), Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo (Turin), Galleria
d’Arte Moderna (Turin), Fotomuseum (Winterthur). In 2010
a large selection of his works was included in the group exhibition
La carte d’après nature, curated by Thomas
Demand, at the Nouveau Musée National de Monaco. In summer
2011 this exhibition was presented in New York by Matthew Marks
Gallery. Bice Curiger has selected him for her exhibition ILLUMInations
at the 54th Biennale di Venezia. 1 come
pensare per immagini (how to think through images) A phrase
in a newspaper crumpled on the pavement that appeared in a photograph
by Ghirri that he chose in 1979 to be the final image of his
series Kodachrome.
For enquiries, please contact Andrew Mummery at: andrew@mummeryschnelle.com
or
Laurent Cottier at: laurent@mummeryschnelle.com |


|
|
Back to exhibitions
Click here to download
a pdf of the press release
Please scroll down for installation views |