WINE.
BEYOND OBJECTS

Photographic exhibition “Wine: Beyond Landscape”

Curated by: Luca Panaro

Photographs by: Giacomo Alberico, Cecilia Del Gatto, Alessandra Draghi, Cesare Lopopolo, Anna Vezzosi

Presentation April 3, 2019, Biblioteca Capitolare
piazza Duomo 19, Verona

April 8 - 18, 2019, Salone del Mobile
Bottega Immagine, via Farini 60, Milano

May 24 - 25, 2019, Cantine Aperte
Tenuta S.Cristina, Peschiera del Garda

October 31 - November 3, 2019, The Others
Alessandro Riberi ex Military Hospital, Turin

November 23, 2019 - May, 28 2021, Tenuta S. Cristina
Peschiera del Garda

June 11-27, 2021, Centrale Festival, Rocca Malatestiana
Fano (Italy)

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Images don’t document their subjects. They evoke them in shots that seek to go beyond the objects they depict. The land of Lugana and Valpolicella, the vineyards, the wood casks, the glass containers, instruments, and machines: Through the photographic imagination and creative reading of five talented young people, they all become something “beyond” their primary function.

The intimate connection between viticulture and experimentation comes to fruition in artistic form in the photographic exhibition and accompanying catalog, “Wine: Beyond Objects” produced by the master’s program in photography at the Brera Academy of Fine Arts in Milan.

The choices made by each of the 5 artists led to the revival of forms that represent abstraction. Giacomo Alberico's photographs entitled "Se nell'attesa" ("If While You Wait"), show the casks stored in Zenato's cellar. They have been photographed so as to reveal their aesthetic component and the physical relationship that exists between these grand, noble vessels. In the series "Méscita" ("Pour"), Cecilia Del Gatto depicts the glass and the different chromatic gradations of wine as they become the main characters of the image. Along the way, she creates a parallelism using the classic colors of Italian artistic tradition.
Alessandra Draghi brings our attention on to a common winemaking object, the wine thief, hence the title of the work, "Ladro" ("Thief"). It's been photographed on set with other natural elements plucked from the terrain.
Cesare Lopopolo's "Le cose sensibili" ("Sensitive Things") are mechanical implements, an imposing presence indicative of the winery landscape.
Finally, there is Anna Vezzosi with her series "Punti di origine" ("Places of Origin"), she takes us back to tradition: the land, the first bottle of Lugana from 1973, and a white circle that shows us the roots of the indigenous grape vine.

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WINE.
BEYOND landscape

Photographic exhibition “Wine: Beyond Landscape”

Curated by: Martina della Valle e Luca Panaro

Photographs by: Lisa Dollhopf, Stefanie Dollhopf, Jorge Garrido, Lara Sapper, Marina Villanueva

Preview October, October 19-31, 2020, Italian Embassy in Berlin - Germany
Hiroshimastr. 1 - 10785 Berlin
Guided tours


October 17-19, 2021
Vinitaly Special Edition
VeronaFiere, Verona

DEEPENING

Backstage video

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The theme selected for the second exhibit is “landscape” as a source of knowledge and as a silent, noble witness to the production of wine. The choices made by each of the artists and the imprinting they have received at the F/16 Schule für Fotografie in Berlin have led each to offer an original interpretation of the chosen theme as they pursued a desire to move “beyond” traditional iconography.

In her series “Im Herbst” (“In Autumn”), Lisa Dollhopf explores the landscape through a series of “photograms,” in other words, images produced in a camera obscura (without the use of a conventionalcamera). She used paper silhouettes of floral shapes positioned on photosensitive material to create them.

Stefanie Dollhopf’s photomontage, entitled “Fragments of a Story,” offers imagined landscapes obtained by capturing fragments of the harvest in the frame. These photographs represent impressions and notes from a story that she gathered during her stay among the vines.

In “Deseo” (“Desire”), Jorge Garrido explores the relationship between pleasure and wine in a series of photographs in which the surfaces of wine and the landscape of the body converse. The use of close-up shots allows the artist to isolate and capture detail.

In Lara Sapper’s series of images entitled “Monochromatic - A Flash of Color,” colored filters combined with the use of artificial light show the landscape of wine in a different and unnatural light, thus transforming it into an abstract subject.

In “Vintage Science,” Marina Villanueva instead underlines the important role of the microbiome in determining the quality of wine. In her photographs, a special lens allows the artist to observe the precious natural microorganisms up close.

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