Some photographers purposely go to find moments of drama to talk about something. I’ve been there, it is not that I haven’t seen certain realities, but in all this, I have always thought that parallel to extraordinary events there is also the ordinary of a lady who enters a shop and buys a bunch of flowers.

I’m not a supporter of ‘beautiful photographs’: I want, hope, try, believe to take pictures that have multiple layers. I’m certainly interested in the landscape, but always in function of the relationship that people establish with the environment.”

What is your feeling with people? I mean not only at the beach but also in discos, in squares, in parks, in the mountains, in short, where you usually shoot…
I don’t think people are graphic signs that have to embellish my photos. I think everyone has his own life and I’m interested in inspecting it essentially through the relationships established between individuals, trying to capture their past and their future. I don’t take pictures because people are well arranged in space, because they have a nice color, because they have a green jacket or a purple bathing suit. I’m not a supporter of “beautiful photographs”: I want, hope, try, believe to take pictures that have multiple layers. I’m certainly interested in the landscape, but always in function of the relationship that people establish with the environment. Unfortunately, photography bears the stigma of the so-called “beautiful photography”, before the Düsseldorf School the whole problem of this expressive medium was linked to the creation of “beautiful pictures” and everybody tried, in one way or another, to pursue this goal. These German artists have somehow dismantled this idea of the “beautiful photo” or its subject. Even street photography, for instance, consisted in the fact that a photographer (I can say so because I also tried my hand at this genre) would go out in the morning, go to a place, which he considered chosen for his work, and if he came across a shocking scene he would shoot it thinking he had taken the picture of the month. But what is the reasoning behind it, what does it mean, why? Photography was only linked to a series of coincidences, events or non-occurrences, that is, tied to something external.

Noemi Pittaluga,”Photography for me is everything” in Massimo Vitali. Una storia italiana, Ledizioni, 2021, pp. 97-111.

“You see so many tragic moments, people killed, I’ve been there, it is not that I haven’t seen certain realities, but in all this, I have always thought that parallel to extraordinary events there is also the ordinary of a lady who enters a shop and buys a bunch of flowers.”

Can we say that your shots – even if they capture moments of leisure and vacation – are not souvenirs of a holiday or a recreational experience with a private character, but a kind of evolution of the relationship that photography has with the social reality of free time?
When I go to take a picture, I already know what I want, I don’t look for anything, I don’t want to take “beautiful photos”, in my shots people don’t do anything extraordinary but they explain to me (and I hope to others too) who they are, what they think, why they are there. It’s a completely different way of thinking. I don’t want extraordinariness or a beautiful light, I don’t want all those things that have made the history of photography and that – despite almost thirty years have passed since the advent of the Germans – have not completely disappeared yet. Even today in the collective thought we always hear the observation: “what a beautiful photo, where did you take it?”. They just ask me: “where did you take this picture? Why did you use this light?” Well, that is the light! I always take pictures during the day, at 1.30PM, when the sun is more vertical and there are fewer shadows, there are no effects, I don’t want images with special elements, I don’t want extraordinary events, but I want simplicity. And in simplicity I want to understand how people live; not everybody shoots themselves or is touched by a tragedy. Many people have healthy, normal relationships, maybe even problematic ones if you like, but always within a balanced existence. This is what interests me; I’m not interested in the extraordinary, I’m attracted to normality because in this reality there are already many points to reflect on. […] Some photographers purposely go to find moments of drama to talk about something, often forcing their hand with tricks in the use of lights to amplify the catastrophe. I have taken a lot of photographs of demonstrations, events, etc.You see so many tragic moments, people killed, I’ve been there, it is not that I haven’t seen certain realities, but in all this, I have always thought that parallel to extraordinary events there is also the ordinary of a lady who enters a shop and buys a bunch of flowers. I am very interested in normality, but for the photojournalist, drama is never enough.

Noemi Pittaluga,”Photography for me is everything” in Massimo Vitali. Una storia italiana, Ledizioni, 2021, pp. 97-111.

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