NUORO.- The Museo d'arte della Provincia di Nuoro summer programme explores the cultural and political context of the contemporary Mediterranean world.
The show is the first major exhibition at an Italian museum devoted to Guido Guidi (Cesena, 1941), one of the most important names in Italian post-war photography. An exhibition curated by Irina Zucca Alessandrelli and produced by the MAN in partnership with ISRE, Istituto Superiore Regionale Etnografico della Sardegna, Guido Guidi. In Sardegna: 1974, 2011 features 232 unpublished photographs illustrating Guido Guidis relationship with Sardinia, some taken during his first visit in 1974 and others in 2011, the year he worked on an important commission on the island for ISRE.
The exhibition provides both an anthropological and environmental account of the changes that took place on the island over the course of four decades, exploring the medium of photography by juxtaposing black and white images from 1974 with colour pictures from 2011.
Faces and traces of human presences, as well as dwellings, dirt tracks and pools of water, become the subjects of a story without protagonists, uncovered by the encounter with the photographic lens. This tale told through images illustrates how Guido Guidis style developed over the years.
The exhibition occupies the four floors of the MAN and is arranged according to the timeline of the photographers two visits to Sardinia and the different photographic techniques he used. The first part features the black and white photographs taken in 1974 with a Nikon camera and 55mm lens, the same camera used by the star of Antonionis Blow-up and also by Ugo Mulas, as stated by Guidi. The exhibition continues with the colour photographs from 2011, some taken with a digital camera and others on analogue supports, in medium format with a super wide camera and in large format with an 8x10 wooden field camera, like the one used by Walker Evans a century ago, with his head under the hood, continues Guidi.
Looking at these images today allows to enjoy places and details that are often unrecognizable now, but also to observe, more than ever before, the evolution of Guidis working method spanning the four decades of his relationship with Sardinia. A creative journey and the ripening of a style that is already apparent in the images from the first journey, re-emerging even more strongly in the photographs from 2011. For todays visitors, the comparison between these two periods of Guido Guidis photographic production is a rare opportunity to understand the originality of his work with respect to the Italian and international scene.
The works on display, reprinted by the artist for the exhibition, are documented in a three-volume catalogue in a slip-case published by MACK Books in London and comprising texts authored by Irina Zucca Alessandelli, Antonello Frongia and Luigi Fassi.
Guido Guidi was born in 1941 in Cesena, where he lives and works today.
In 1959 he moved to Venice, where he studied architecture and industrial design at the IUAV, attending courses taught by Bruno Zevi, Carlo Scarpa, Bruno Munari, Luigi Veronesi and Italo Zannier among others. From 1966 onwards he devoted himself to photography, focusing on subjects linked to the contemporary landscape and its transformations, both through his own personal research carried out over the years and through participation in territorial documentation projects for public and research institutions.
From the 1980s onwards, as a result of the encounter between photographic culture and urban planning culture, he was called upon to take part in research projects investigating the transformation of towns and the territory, including research into the Veneto urban sprawl between Venice, Padua and Treviso (1982), the Archivio dello Spazio della Provincia di Milano (1991), the Ina-Casa investigations into public building (1999), the work for Atlante Italiano (carried out for the Direzione Generale per lArchitettura e lArte Contemporanea, 2003) and the photographic campaign for the region of the Marche (2009).
As well as working as a photographer, he also taught photography from 1989 onwards at the Accademia di Belle Arti in Ravenna, from 2001 at the IUAV in Venice and from 2009 at the ISIA in Urbino.
He has exhibited at various prestigious Italian and international institutions, including the Fondation Henri Cartier-Bresson in Paris, the Venice Biennale, the Canadian Centre for Architecture in Montreal, the Guggenheim Museum and the Whitney Museum in New York, the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris and the Fotomuseum in Winterthur.