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A KIND OF BEAUTY – Gabriele Micalizzi

Instanbul. Turkey. 11.06.2013. Clashes in Gezi Park. Dissent protests in Turkey against the Erdogan government originated from a sit-in against the construction of a shopping mall in place of Gezi Park in Istanbul. After police attacks on the protesters, the protest reached a national scope and more general political connotations, giving rise to demonstrations across the country that were violently suppressed by the government. © Gabriele Micalizzi- courtesy of 29 ARTS IN PROGRESS GALLERY

Opening tomorrow Thursday, 4th April through to 28th June 2024, 29 ARTS IN PROGRESS gallery will be exhibiting the works of photographer Gabriele Micalizzi, for the first time in Milan.

The exhibition, A KIND OF BEAUTY, curated by Tiziana Castelluzzo, brings together photographs, ranging from black and white prints to gelatin silver prints and colour, painstakingly selected from negatives preserved in the artist’s archive. On display are the most significant shots depicting some of the venues of the biggest clashes of the last two decades, starting from the Arab revolutions, passing through the conflicts in the Middle East against the caliphate through to the current conflicts in Ukraine and Palestine.

Gabriele Micalizzi was born in Milan in 1984 in Cascina Gobba (a complicated neighbourhood in the Nineties). He has always had a sensitivity, which he channelled into a passion and predisposition for visual arts, first for graffiti and tattoos and later for photography and video making. His first experience of war was at the age of 23, in Afghanistan, followed by a trip to Thailand during the riots created by the Red Shirts in central Bangkok, where he realised his vocation was to be a photojournalist, after taking a shot of a boy injured by a hand bomb right beside him.

© Gabriele Micalizzi, courtesy of 29 ARTS IN PROGRESS GALLERY

According to Gabriele, the war is like a theatre, a term used in the military environment to define the conflict zone, where everyone has a specific role, in a certain scene and in a limited amount of time. The photojournalist’s task is to illustrate and narrate using a single weapon: the camera, the only available means that becomes a tool of action to share that stage where emotions run high, expand, and are exacerbated, friendships are consolidated or lost, and solidarity becomes a primary and essential need.

By using photography with impeccable skill, Micalizzi is able to create images that are not slaves of reality or intention but instead represent a world of its own with its coherence, autonomy and evocative power.

Cario Egypt 01.02.2011 © Gabriele Micalizzi, courtesy of 29 ARTS IN PROGRESS GALLERY

Gabriele has an extraordinary ability to synthesize; he manages to combine poetry, power, and beauty in a single shot. His photographs, even the most explicit ones, are a metaphorical expression of a wider, more complex reality that leads the viewer to ask questions about events, mankind and the nature of conflicts. Gabriele not only portrays war, but he experiences it first hand by standing next to the fighters, in the middle of the scene, whilst facing their same risks. His shots portray not only what he sees, but his entire emotional baggage too. Gabriele’s gaze however is never judgemental, but it is free and open, as though it were guided by a need for clarity and understanding of the most intimate and humane aspects of the facts of history.

Tiziana Castelluzzo

His works do not oppress the observer nor reduce the image to a spectacle of photographic virtuosity, but instead generate a broad and open terrain of engagement, a space where the image articulates its information and evokes in the viewer multiple meanings that transcend itself. Despite being rich in detail, his photographs are arranged in a precise composition order without ever undermining the complexity of reality.

In a historical moment in time where individuals are submerged by information and influenced by media that shape people’s aesthetic consciousness, blurring the lines between reality and fiction, Gabriele Micalizzi has found a way to report on the war from an invisible perspective, by using his experience to create works of art (photographs) that capture the gaze, the mind, and the soul of the observer.

The exhibition will guide visitors through the unsettling and disturbing gaze of Gabriele Micalizzi, whose shots force the audience to weigh, collect and process the most disparate meanings of every single detail of the photographs presented.

© Gabriele Micalizzi, courtesy of 29 ARTS IN PROGRESS GALLERY

Gabriele Micalizzi, A KIND OF BEAUTY 4th April – 28th June 2024, 29 ARTS IN PROGRESS

During Milan Art Week, a selection of Gabriele Micalizzi’s works will be presented as part of the new edition of MIA Photo Fair from 10th to 14th April 2024.

“Legacy”, a collection of works and an installation by Micalizzi that aim to reflect on the physicality of photography will also be on display at Santa Giulia Museum in Brescia from 23rd April until 1st September 2024.

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