Guido Guidi »
Di sguincio
Exhibition: 3 Feb – 11 Mar 2023
Large Glass
392 Caledonian Road
N1 1DN London
+44 (0)20-76099345
info@largeglass.co.uk
www.largeglass.co.uk
Wed-Sat 11-18
Guido Guidi
"Di sguincio"
Exhibition: 3 February – 11 March 2023
Di sguincio is an exhibition of 22 prints by the Italian photographer Guido Guidi, his sixth solo
exhibition at Large Glass. It coincides with the publication by MACK of the homonymous volume,
the first of a trilogy entitled Album, which brings to fruition a series of over a hundred black-and-white
photographs made by Guidi with small-format cameras between 1969 and 1981.
From the published series, the exhibition showcases selected photographs, mostly taken from 1977
to 1980 in Treviso and Preganziol, in Northern Italy, where Guidi taught at the time. This is a key
juncture in Guidi’s work, as he continues his experimentation in black-and-white and increasingly in
colour before moving to working predominantly in colour with a large format camera in the early
1980s.
'Di sguincio' is an Italian expression, often associated with looking, that can be translated as
obliquely, aslant, asquint, and, by extension, diagonally, furtively, indirectly. This phrase poignantly
conveys a key tenet of Guido Guidi’s aesthetics: a tangential gaze that seeks to dismantle received
views, like the frontal view often associated to photography, and, by extension, to its purported
verisimilitude or indexicality. Instead, Guidi’s photography favours an accidental gaze, aimed at
uncovering unexpected slants to everyday objects, people or places, for which in the early 1980s he
coined the term of 'qualsiasità', what-so-everness.
In this series, Guidi experiments quite playfully with chance or staged encounters with friends,
family, objects, and also animals, seemingly without looking, or only through the corner of his eye
as the series title suggests. Many of these photographs focus on details of objects, scenes, or parts
of people’s bodies, often employing medium close-ups which flaunt a lower framing, taken at chest
level, and regularly foreground the subjects’ hands. These hands work as metonyms for
photography as they point to things outside the frame, seize translucent objects like glasses, or draw
with light, repeatedly staging a performance of the act of photographing.
Text by Marina Spunta (Associate Professor of Italian, School of Arts, University of Leicester)
In this series, Guidi experiments quite playfully with chance or staged encounters with friends,
family, objects, and also animals, seemingly without looking, or only through the corner of his eye
as the series title suggests. Many of these photographs focus on details of objects, scenes, or parts
of people’s bodies, often employing medium close-ups which flaunt a lower framing, taken at chest
level, and regularly foreground the subjects’ hands. These hands work as metonyms for
photography as they point to things outside the frame, seize translucent objects like glasses, or draw
with light, repeatedly staging a performance of the act of photographing.
Text by Marina Spunta, Associate Professor of Italian, School of Arts, University of Leicester.
Guido Guidi (born 1941, Cesena) is one of Italy’s most respected photographers, with a career spanning
more than five decades. Neorealist film and conceptual art have played a significant role in shaping his
unsentimental but also intensely personal vision. He has mostly focused his lens on rural and suburban
geographies close to his home and occasionally wider afield in Europe.
Guido Guidi’s photographs are part of International public collections, including the Musée d’Art
Moderne de la Ville de Paris; Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo, Turin and ICCD in Rome; Fondation A
Stichting in Brussels; Canadian Centre for Architecture, Montréal and San Francisco Museum of Modern
Art.
Guidi has produced over 30 monographs to date, including In Sardegna: 1974, 2011 (MACK) for
which he was awarded the Premio Hemingway 2020 Prize for Photography.