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Art, History & Politics, Literature, Photography

Fulvio Roiter’s New York

at the Italian Cultural Institute, 686 Park Ave.

Date
Tuesday, May 3, 2022
Time
6:00 pm

Overview

Istituto Italiano di Cultura New York
Casa Italiana Zerilli-Marimò at NYU
present

Fulvio Roiter’s New York

Tuesday, May 3, 6pm
Istituto Italiano di Cultura New York, 686 Park Ave

A visual presentation by
Victoria Noel-Johnson
Curator of the exhibition Fulvio Roiter: High-Rise New York
On view for the NYU Community through May 27 at
Casa Italiana Zerilli-Marimò at NYU
Click here to view a video presentation of the exhibition

Followed by a conversation with
Victoria Noel-Johnson, curator, Fulvio Roiter: High-Rise New York
Fabio Finotti, Director, Istituto Italiano di Cultura New York
Stefano Albertini, Director, Casa Italiana Zerilli-Marimò at NYU

Presenting the exhibition’s catalogue produced by
SKIRA

Followed by refreshments.

In ENGLISH.

 

About the exhibition and catalogue:
Conceived in 2021 to mark the twentieth anniversary of September 11, 2001, Fulvio Roiter: High-Rise New York celebrates the city and people of New York. Consisting of color photographs taken between 1984 and 1998 by the internationally acclaimed Italian photographer Fulvio Roiter (Meolo, 1926 – Venice, 2016), they collectively capture the traits of beauty, strength, resilience, and hope with a sense of poignant immediacy and timeless elegance. They recall a New York that once was, its instantly recognizable skyline irreparably and arbitrarily altered by events that unfolded just a few years thereafter. Fulvio Roiter: High-Rise New York is not, however, a nostalgic nod to that past. As New York emerges from yet another life-changing experience caused by the Covid-19 global pandemic, Roiter’s intimate portrait of New York and its inhabitants stands as a stoic reminder of life after death, of light after darkness.

About the speaker:
Victoria Noel-Johnson (M.A. Hons, Ph.D.) is an independent British art historian and curator, specialising in early 20th century European art, with expert knowledge of Giorgio de Chirico. Her analysis of important 20th century artists, as well as the reconstruction of now-dispersed European art collections and historic exhibitions, forms the basis of recent and forthcoming publications and projects. She has worked as the Curator of Fondazione Giorgio e Isa de Chirico (Rome) where she managed the Foundation’s extensive art collection and oversaw its international exhibition programme. She published De Chirico and the United Kingdom (c. 1916-1978), and curated the revisionist exhibition Giorgio de Chirico: il volto della Metafisica (The Changing Face of Metaphysical Art) at the Palazzo Ducale in Genoa in 2019. In 2021, she worked on Picasso, de Chirico and Dalì: A Dialogue with Raphael, a show organised to mark the 500th anniversary of Raphael’s death that explored his influence on the work of three great 20th century artists.

About the artist:
Born in Meolo (in the province of Venice) in 1926, Fulvio Roiter obtained his diploma in chemistry, but began dedicating his time to photography in 1947, going professional in 1953, the year of his first of many photographic journeys around the world – that time in Sicily. His first book of photographs, the black-and-white volume Venise à fleur d’eau, was published in 1954. His book Umbria: Terra di San Francesco won the Nadar prize in 1956. Hailing from the Neorealist school of photography, Roiter developed and refined the “narrative strength and poetic eye” through his black-and-white photographs, adopting a format that was unusual for the time – the rectangle – in which he would place objects and characters from daily life in a context that put “the shapes of the composition” ahead of everything else. He obtained international success with his photographs of Venice, featured in the best-selling 1977 book Essere Venezia. It was after this that he abandoned the black-and-white medium for the use of color, one of many radical changes in his style and choice of subjects that occurred at that time. During his career, Roiter published over 70 books of photographs from his journeys all over the world. He died in Venice on April 18, 2016.

 

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