I have recently started or rather restarted
the gigantic task of converting my best B&W negatives to digital files with
a contraption I had made for the task. It cost me a bottle of Vodka.
What a pleasure, and how surprising it is
to go back a revisit photographs taken some thirty years ago. The first thing
that is striking, is how much things have changed. I am dealing at the moment
with the photographs I took of Italy when I came here on holiday and then a
little later came to live here.
I had the fortune to work as a photographer
for a local news magazine whilst I learnt Italian. It was a great experience
and I quickly learnt a lot about Italy. I also had access to all sorts of
interesting places. I did this for a couple of years before returning to my “real”
profession.
So here we go with a few pictures and some
random reflections.
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Carnivale, Reggio Emilia |
|
Parma, I had this shot published in the Economist. |
On market day here in Reggio Emilia the local
farmers would meet with buyers and other various agents. Deals would be struck
and I suppose there was a lot of catching up on the latest gossip. This has all gone now, all the character has disappeared
from our main Piazza.
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Reggio Emilia |
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Reggio Emilia |
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Reggio
Emilia |
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Reggio
Emilia |
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Reggio
Emilia |
In the last few months of my time with the magazine,
I was dispatched to the local stadium to photograph the local team as it headed
towards promotion to the “Seria B”. The stadium was always packed and the unruly
“Ultras” were watched over by an army of riot police. The local team now
can only attract a few hundred fans on a Sunday. Satellite TV has killed football as a
spectator sport. Why go to see the Reggiana in the third division when you can
see Milan or Juventus live on TV at home.
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The day a bike finished up on the pitch. Reggio Emilia |
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Reggio
Emilia |
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Reggio
Emilia |
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Reggio
Emilia |
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Reggio
Emilia |
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Reggio
Emilia |
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Reggio
Emilia |
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Reggio
Emilia |
I wonder how things have changed down in
Abruzzo in the small seaside town where I spent a couple of holidays. You could
buy a live rabbit or chicken to ensure that your Sunday lunch had the freshest
of meat.
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Pineto,
Abruzzo |
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Pineto,
Abruzzo |
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Pineto,
Abruzzo |
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Atri Abruzzo |
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Abruzzo |
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Pineto,
Abruzzo |
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Pineto,
Abruzzo |
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Pineto,
Abruzzo |
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Pineto,
Abruzzo |
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Pineto,
Abruzzo |
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Pineto,
Abruzzo |
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Pineto,
Abruzzo |
The farmers market was the real thing, not
some middle-class urbanite fantasy food market.
How about the Cinque Terra in June with
just a couple of local children playing football in the street?
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Cinque Terre |
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Cinque
Terra |
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Cinque
Terra |
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Cinque
Terra |
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Cinque
Terra |
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Cinque
Terra |
Thanks to the power of the media, internet
and the bucket list mentality of mass tourism, the little villages that make up
the Cinque Terra are now an overcrowded hell hole for much of the year.
The area along the River Po is the place
that has changed less. I could still take lots of the pictures I took all those
years ago.
|
Guastalla, RE |
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Guastalla, RE
|
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Guastalla, RE
|
Another thing that has not changed is the process
of making Parmigiano Reggiano (Parmesan) cheese. They have made it like that
for a thousand years.
|
Reggio Emilia |
|
Reggio Emilia |
I suppose I could still take shots like
this at the local agricultural shows.
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Reggio
Emilia |
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Reggio
Emilia |
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Reggio
Emilia |
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Reggio
Emilia |
Here in Reggio Emilia as in all of Emilia,
the Italian Communist Party ruled almost without opposition. They got over 90%
of the vote in some villages near the Po. Who would ever believe that they would
merge and be swallowed up by the Democrazia Christiana their arch rivals. “Unita”
the party newspaper was displayed for all to readin the main square. The
newspaper died a slow death and the newspaper displays now remain as an empty
reminder.
|
Reggio
Emilia |
|
Parma, this is another shot that I had published in the Economist |
|
Reggio
Emilia |
|
The Italian Communist pary on parade for the Libération day celebrations. |
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Voting, Reggio Emilia |
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Voting, Reggio Emilia |
Finally one realises that they are not
young anymore.