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Marina di Ravenna, 1986 -
Bologna, 1985 -
Modena, 1970 -
Installation view 3 Duke Street -
Untitled, 1972-75 -
Installation view 3 Duke Street -
In one sense, Ghirri shot pictures the way we shoot with our phones. In another sense, this is deceptive: he was a master of composition, and the randomness or banality suggested by his framing is a precise illusion. This is most widely celebrated in his images of landscapes of Emilia-Romagna, the region in which he was based his entire life, one he saw eaten away at by industrialisation and one in which he subverted the codes of tourist photography. But this exhibition skirts the most totemic images of Ghirri’s for the more subdued and nuanced: the second portion of the exhibition (at 11 Duke Street, St James’s) explores his interiors and exteriors, and how he used them to further his conceptual aims. Pictures of wallpapers and wall panelling flatten the room as if it were another page in a book, the printed atlas he travelled on with his finger in other compositions. Writing on the wall and writing on a page echo the same flatness, as if he were taking a picture of an image on a screen: every surface is like a mirror of the medium. Four photographs from the studio of Giorgio Morandi remind us of Ghirri’s deep relationships with the other Italian artists of his time, those who also grappled with modernity with various strategies: of minimalism, of reduction, of indexicality in representation, and a suspicious eye towards symbolism.
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Campagna Emiliana, 1985-89 -
Modena, 1971 -
Installation view 11 Duke Street -
This felt intimacy is that of someone capturing a moment likely without the presumption of a viewer, or at least the artist replicating this unpretentiousness. Gonzalez-Torres used a commercial puzzle-cutting service to create these works, which transformed photographs into jigsaw puzzles and returned them sealed in plastic bags. He did so with a variety of source imagery, including numerous personal photographs through the 1980s and 90s: photos of his lover, their last letters to each other, newspaper clippings of crowds, Mickey and Minnie Mouse, references to the Gulf War, childhood portraits, and quotidian moments of places travelled to. The landscape, here, is a flicker of somebody’s presence, captured by the camera and unravelled by the fragmentation of a jigsaw puzzle – and then brought back together again, solved and sealed to never come apart again.
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Installation view 11 Duke Street -
Modena, 1973 -
Modena, 1973 -
Luigi Ghirri: Felicità
Current viewing_room












