Paolo is an Italian-born, Brooklyn-based photographer. His narratives are created by constructing and photographing miniature sets from found objects, bringing his small realities to life. There is a terrific article and interview with Paolo on The F Stop, written by Lloyd Wise. I'm also share a Vimeo about his work from Winter Stories below:
Paolo Ventura show-and-tell on Winter Stories from Aperture Foundation on Vimeo.
The work featured below is from his The Automaton of Venice series, and it very much reminds me very much of Scorsese's recent movie, Hugo. The series is adapted from a children’s tale that takes place during the Nazi occupation of Italy. The photographs tell the story of an elderly watchmaker who builds an automaton to keep him company during the evacuation of the Venice ghetto. “I wanted to create a city that was at once familiar and unknown,” Ventura told me, “almost as if you walked through Venice, opened a gate, and discovered something you’d never seen before. This is a Venice I would have liked to have seen, but that no longer exists. Maybe it never really existed at all—except in my fantasy.” Dewi Lewis has published a book of this work under the title, The Automaton.
Images from The Automaton







2 comments:
One of my favorites. I loved seeing his large prints.
So incredible! I was able to see his work at Obsolete yesterday and found it absolutely captivating. Thank you for sharing Aline.
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