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Il realismo magico di Mario Giacomelli

from the: January 1, 2025
to the: January 1, 2031

2020 marked the twentieth anniversary of the death of Mario Giacomelli and the Municipality of Senigallia, City of Photography, continues to pay homage to one of the international masters of twentieth century photography in 2021, dedicating a wing of Palazzo del Duca to a permanent exhibition of his works donated in the 90s by the artist himself to the Municipality. 2020 marked the twentieth anniversary of the death of Mario Giacomelli and the Municipality of Senigallia, City of Photography, continues to pay homage to one of the international masters of twentieth century photography in 2021, dedicating a wing of the Palazzo del Duca to a permanent exhibition of his works donated in the 90s by the artist himself to the Municipality. In a redeveloped portion of Palazzo del Duca, which for years has hosted the exhibition program of the city of Senigallia, approximately 80 photographs will be available, selected and set up in collaboration with the Giacomelli archives represented by the two directors Simone Giacomelli and Katiuscia Blonde. Not a temporary exhibition, therefore, but a real museum that aims to tell the poetic and artistic universe of the great Senigallian photographer and make it permanently accessible to citizens and visitors. In addition, we want to provide an innovative reading of the master’s work which is proposed not in an anthological way, that is, for years and series, but retraces his poetics, highlighting themes and suggestions. The salient trait of the personality – private and photographic – of Mario Giacomelli is the strong rootedness to his land, reluctantly he moved from it, but despite this he succeeded right away through his art to overcome geographical boundaries being his work characterized by a strong spirit of experimentation and from a voracious will to research “ Giacomelli starts from reality not to document it with pretended objectivity, but to raise the particular to the universal, to direct time towards the circular infinity of eternal return. ” – writes Katiuscia Biondi – “< em> He uses photography to immerse himself in the world, and in his own bowels, recognizing himself as a sort of purifying rite. The individual shots are insoluble frames of a single story, that of his life and his relationship with the world, and each photo refers to the others in a symbolic and signic stylistic unity that only a master can pursue with such coherence and evocative power < / em> “. He didn’t move much from Senigallia, he visited Scanno, Lourdes, Loreto, Puglia and Calabria, but it was from the landscape and the characters of his land that he drew heavily: the seminarians of “ I have no hands to caress my face “, the elders of the hospice of” Death will come and have your eyes “, the countryside with the people who live there, the lovers inspired by the anthology of Spoon River , the portraits, all tell about Senigallia and its territory, from the sea to the hinterland. “ Giacomelli starts from reality not to document it with pretended objectivity, but to raise the particular to the universal, to direct time towards the circular infinity of the eternal return. ” – Biondi continues – “ Making his own the teaching of the master Cavalli, for a photograph freed from the pure document that there is no world beyond our gaze, Giacomelli takes this vision to excess, in his dramatic way of making reality resonate “. To complete the permanent exhibition, a temporary exhibition The realities of the Dream from xx to xx at Palazzetto Baviera which aims to document that “Senigallian laboratory” of photography that was the Misa Group founded by Giuseppe Cavalli in 1954 in which a young and curious Giacomelli joined for a short time together with Ferruccio Ferroni: a group that contributed to the important theoretical debate that took place in Italy in those years around the functions and aesthetics of photography. Selected works by Giacomelli, Ferroni and Cavalli always coming from the collected Civics, alongside their disciples and followers, who gave life to the Misa Group. A common milieu which however produced very different results, both in the photographic rendering, in the technique and in the poetics of the various authors, an extraordinary laboratory of ideas that had a short but intense life and from which the genius of Mario Giacomelli it distinguished itself and developed throughout the second half of the twentieth century.

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Flat time is the right time

from the: December 21, 2025
to the: June 2, 2026

The Fondazione Cassa di Risparmio di Jesi and the Municipality of Senigallia present the photography exhibition Flat time is the right time, a unique opportunity to see over one hundred emblematic images exhibited together. These works investigate the relationship of the photographic medium with bodies, places, surfaces, and still lifes—subjects dear to both historical and contemporary art and photography. Curators Roberto Maggiori and Luca Panaro have selected 67 international artists from the extensive Pier Luigi Gibelli Collection who best represent these macro-themes, each of which is preceded by a reflection that introduces the visual journey. The exhibition is divided between two venues: Palazzo Bisaccioni in Jesi, with the section dedicated to bodies, and Palazzo del Duca in Senigallia, featuring photographs of places and still lifes. The exhibition reflects on the importance of a collection as a means to interpret the evolution of artistic language through a series of personal choices. These choices offer a unique perspective on photography, highlighting both forward-thinking innovations and the stylistic recurrences inherent in the use of the medium. The collection in question belongs to Pier Luigi Gibelli, a plastic and aesthetic surgeon who began collecting photography in the early 1990s. He discovered himself to be a collector by passion—an expression of the same aesthetic sensibility that guides his profession. Visiting the exhibition, beyond the thematic sections and their distribution across the two venues, one notices a particular approach to the construction of the image. In some of the works on display, close-up shots are prioritized; in many cases, the photographer’s intent seems to be observing reality from an alternative point of view that the human eye does not always permit. For this reason, the perspective feels original and opens up new opportunities for research. Having moved past the idea of photography as a direct adherence to reality, the colors of the images chase the perception we have of things within media representation. The photographer is increasingly less inclined to document a location, focusing instead on the occurrence of an action—one that they themselves trigger within the landscape, following only the internal rules of their own artistic poetics. At times, the exhibition highlights internal revolutions within the apparent linearity of photographic history, credited to artists who are not easily categorized into specific movements or trends. These creators of often solitary poetics have, nonetheless, deeply influenced the artistic shifts still taking place today. Photographs on display by: Berenice Abbot, Charlotte Abramow, Giulia Agostini, Nobuyoshi Araki, Evgenia Arbugaeva, Jessica Backhaus, Roger Ballen, Olivo Barbieri, Gabriele Basilico, Hans Bellmer, Jacopo Benassi, Gianni Berengo Gardin, Karl Blossfeldt, Andrea Botto, Piergiorgio Branzi, Brassaï, Sophie Calle, Silvia Camporesi, Giovanni Chiaramonte, Federico Clavarino, Mario Cresci, Gregory Crewdson, Paola Di Bello, Robert Doisneau, Eliott Erwitt, Walker Evans, Joan Fontcuberta, Vittore Fossati, Luigi Ghirri, Mario Giacomelli, Paolo Gioli, Robert Gligorov, Guido Guidi, Florence Henri, Todd Hido, Kenro Izu, Ogawa Kazumasa, Taisuke Koyama, Uliano Lucas, Urs Luthi, Esko Männikkö, Allegra Martin, Nino Migliori, Arno Rafael Minkkinen, Walter Niedermayr, Erwin Olaf, Giulia Parlato, Regina Petersen, Paola Pivi, Barbara Probst, Jan Saudek, Ferdinando Scianna, Andres Serrano, Malick Sibidé, William Eugene Smith, Kiki Smith, Alec Soth, Alessandra Spranzi, Tilo & Toni, Franco Vaccari, Paolo Ventura, Weegee, William Wegman, Edward Weston, Joel Peter Witkin, George Woodman, Masao Yamamoto. The exhibition is accompanied by the publication “Flat time is the right time: Bodies, Places, and Still Lifes from the Pier Luigi Gibelli Collection,” edited by Roberto Maggiori and Luca Panaro. Featuring texts by Mauro Carbone, Antonello Frongia, Roberto Maggiori, and Luca Panaro. Graphic Design by Emiliano Biondelli. Published by Editrice Quinlan, 2025.

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