(click on the image to enlarge./ click en la imagen para ampliar)
Untitled # 1 ( from the series "The Genovese Rhapsody")
© Flavio Martín Morante_2011
How do you really make a portrait of a city?
This is a question I have been asking myself for quite a while and since the question itself grows from the mix of two of my deepest passions (photography and travel), its answer sometimes changes depending of the city itself and the connection I establish with it.
Recently in a visit to Genova an answer to that question made itself visible in the multiple corners of the city, thanks to the different layers of advertising posters covering the infinite walls and streets that move around her like a chaotically organized diagram; each poster not only talking about the different aspects of the place and its inhabitants (socially, politically, historically, musically, etc, etc), but acting too as a metaphor of the different cultural layers that compose an urb of such size and history. Once one of the main entrances to the "Old World", Genova shows us the fingerprints of human history printed in every block, door and streets like many other crossroads points between old and new worlds do. Still today, the whole area boils with the mixed kind of cultural heritage that at the same time gives it its own and unique identity. The identity of a place deeply cosmopolitan but still rooted on its european stage setting of which is part of.
Step by step and block by block I found the compositions that today you see here, and while standing in front of them I could not avoid to create in my mind a mirrored image of what it was in front of me and what was behind, where the overwhelming (but still pleasant) cacophony that covers the air with music, sounds, and voices added to the smells that float in every corner and the constant flashing of images that make you look, stop, and look again making each step a discovery, the discovery of the constant beauty of a place where people from all corners of the world has added their little piece of identity in top of each other, creating a whole and turning Genova into a massive and generous treasure. A feast for the senses.
F. Martín Morante, 2011.
As I finish details for Tuesday when I will be hanging at the NRCSA the 5 prints selected from the series "The Genovese Rhapsody", my latest body of work freshly "brought" from Genova, Italy (click HERE to see the whole series), I would like to invite you to stop by on this coming Friday to see a lot of good art during the traditional Winter Gallery Night in Milwaukee.
As I finish details for Tuesday when I will be hanging at the NRCSA the 5 prints selected from the series "The Genovese Rhapsody", my latest body of work freshly "brought" from Genova, Italy (click HERE to see the whole series), I would like to invite you to stop by on this coming Friday to see a lot of good art during the traditional Winter Gallery Night in Milwaukee.
I'd love to see you!
Winter Gallery Night
January 20th, 2012, 5 to 9 PM
NRCSA Multicultural Consortium
The Marshall Building
207 E. Buffalo St. Suite #610
Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53202
Thanks to Pamela Ruschman, Sarah, Joseph Cornejo and all the staff at the NRCSA, Dawn, Paula Christensen and Bob from Evald Moulding for the opportunity for this show, the unconditional support and the desire to help.
After there we are going straight to The Estate for some drinks and some jazz. Jump in if you would like it.



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