1. Mario Cattaneo, Jukebox, c. 1960
2. Gianni Berengo-Gardin, Venezia - Il Lido, c. 1958
3. Federico Garolla, Valeria Moriconi - Railway between Rome & Florence, 1959
4. Alfredo Camisa, Botteghino del Circo, 1956
5. Carlo Bavagnoli, Gente di Trastevere, 1957–1958
6. Piergiorgio Branzi, Firenze, Ballo alla casa del popolo di San Frediano, 1959
7. Piergiorgio Branzi, Roma, Via Veneto, 1959
8. Federico Garolla, Elezione a Napoli, 1948
9. Riccardo Moncalvo, Campagna Elettorale, 1948
10. Mario Cattaneo, Untitled, c. 1960
11. Ugo Zovetti, Allo Zoo, c. 1960
12. Ugo Zovetti, Untitled, 1960
13. Mario de Biasi, Palermo, 1950
14. Mario de Biasi, Sunday in August, 1949
15. Mario de Biasi, Outskirts of Milan, Ortica, 1949
16. Gianni Berengo-Gardin, Venezia, processione del Corpus Domini in piazza San Marco, 1958
17. Mario Finocchiaro, Sant'Alfio, Sicilia, 1958
18. Mario Finocchiaro, Sant'Alfio (Miracoli), 1958
19. Ezio Quiresi, Angolo Quieto, 1956
20. Ezio Quiresi, Reti Chioggiotte, c. 1952
21. Ezio Quiresi, Domenica nel Porto, 1956
22. Stanislao Farri, Passa il Giro, 1956
23. Franco Pinna, Roma - Panico, c. 1955
24. Cesare Colombo, Milano, 1958
25. Carlo Bavagnoli, Gente di Trastavere, 1957–1958
26. Giancolombo, Milano, Vile attentato a Togliatti, 1948
27. Fosco Maraini, Grey Sunday, 1952
28. Mario Carrieri, Milano, c. 1958
29. Mario Finocchiaro, Ragazzi di Milano, 1959
30. Giuseppe Bruno, Viaggio del Sud, Matera, 1958
31. Federico Patellani, Fede e magia nell'Italia del Sud, c. 1955
32. Carlo Bevilacqua, Venerdi Santo, c. 1955
33. Alfredo Camisa, Notte di Piedigrotta, 1957
34. Tranquillo Casiraghi, Guardiana di Mucche, c. 1955
35. Giuseppe Bruno, Matera, 1958
36. Enzo Sellerio, Untitled, n.d.
37. Nino Migliori, Gente dell'Emilia, 1959
38. Nino Migliori, Gente dell'Emilia, 1952
39. Nino Migliori, Gente dell'Emilia, 1953
40. Pietro Donzelli, Cinema in Pila, Veneto, 1954
41. Tranquillo Casiraghi, Cavatore d'ardesia, 1959
42. Carlo Cosulich, Operaio Italiano, 1959
43. Mario Finocchiaro, Pietra Ardesia, Cava di Branzi, 1950
44. Mario Cattaneo, Lo Sforzo, c. 1960
45. Mimmo Castellano, Bari, c. 1960
46. Alfredo Camisa, Sicilia, c. 1955
47. Paolo Monti, Window, c. 1955
48. Pietro Donzelli, Flood in Polesine, 1960
49. Stanislao Farri, Curiosità, 1958
50. Pietro Donzelli, Flood in Polesine, 1960
51. Mario Finocchiaro, Milano - Fiera di Sinigaglia, 1959
52. Mario Giacomelli, Scanno, 1959/1970
53. Enrico Cattaneo, Gran Gala (La Scala), 1960
54. Enrico Cattaneo, Alla Parata Militare, c. 1961
55. Nino Migliori, Gente dell'Emilia, 1957
56. Mario Giacomelli, Puglia, 1958/1970
57. Mario Cattaneo, Untitled, c. 1960
58. Mario Carrieri, Milano, c. 1958
59. Mario Carrieri, Milano, c. 1958
60. Gianni Berengo-Gardin, Untitled, c. 1958
61. Mario Carrieri, Milano, c. 1958
Keith de Lellis Gallery presents a group exhibition of vintage Italian photographs to begin the fall season. These photographs from the years following World War II document a period of dramatic change in everyday Italian life. With the fall of Fascism and its image-heavy propaganda came a renewed pursuit of truth in photography. Neorealism expanded rapidly as photographers sought to document every facet of the Italian identity.
The spread of visual communication in the form of illustrated newspapers and magazines resulted in increased social awareness among the general population. Photographers conducted their own ethnographic studies of both thriving and disappearing cultures, from busy cities to small villages. These series include Nino Migliori’s “Gente dell’Emilia,” Mario Finocchiaro’s “Gente de Milano,” and Giacomelli’s studies of remote pastoral regions with “Scanno”.
Both the photographers and their growing audience were interested in discovering Italy as it was experienced by all of its people. Neorealism sought to use the camera as an unbiased, mechanical tool with which to preserve and share these experiences.
While they gravitated towards a journalistic approach in their subject matter, these artists maintained their eye for dramatic, even cinematic, compositions. Full of life, motion, and sentiment, the images pull the viewer in to the moment captured. The beauty of their photographs only served to further their humanist pursuits. Featuring celebrations, prayers, labor, farewells, and more, this exhibition gives the viewer a brief survey of the postwar Italian landscape as some of its native photographers experienced it.
Neorealismo will be on view at the Keith de Lellis Gallery through November 3, 2018.