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Identities
Lisetta Carmi
I Travestiti, 1965-1970
© Lisetta Carmi

Lisetta Carmi »

Identities

Exhibition: 20 Sep – 17 Dec 2023

Wed 20 Sep

Estorick Collection of Modern Italian Art

39a Canonbury Square
N1 2AN London

+44 (0)20-77049522


www.estorickcollection.com

Wed-Sat 11-18 . Sun 11-17

Identities
Lisetta Carmi
I travestiti, Dalida, Genova, 1965-1967
© Lisetta Carmi

This autumn, the Estorick Collection presents the first museum show in the UK of work by groundbreaking photographer Lisetta Carmi (1924-2022), whose imagery is currently receiving renewed attention. Always motivated by a profoundly humanistic spirit, Carmi focused on marginalised sectors of society, such as the working-class and trans communities of her native Genoa.

In addition to being striking works of art in their own right, Carmi’s images are also important socio-political documents exploring significant, yet often overlooked, aspects of Italian life and culture.

Born into a middle-class Jewish family, Carmi was forced to leave school as a consequence of the Racial Laws introduced by Italy’s Fascist regime in 1938 and fled to Switzerland with her family. She went on to enjoy a short but successful career as a concert pianist, but in 1960 abruptly changed direction and decided to devote herself to photography.

Carmi is best known for sensitively chronicling the lives of those who belonged to Genoa’s trans community during the 1960s. The photographs she took resulted in a highly controversial volume of images that was published in 1972 and went on to become a cult classic. This show features around 30 of these works, also including a number of colour images recently rediscovered in the house in Puglia where Carmi retired in 1979 to devote herself to yogi meditation.

Much of Carmi’s photography addressed the social problems associated with labour and experienced by the working classes. The exhibition includes photographs drawn from her studies of the port of Genoa, where she posed as the relative of a docker to photograph the harsh conditions endured by the camalli (labourers).

She also documented the city’s Italsider steelworks, highlighting the dangers of industrial production, and undertook several visits to Sardinia, where she photographed the first women to be employed in the island’s cork industry. She also visited countries such as Israel, Venezuela, Mexico, India and Afghanistan, giving voice, with her images, to those who had none.

Opening Times
Monday and Tuesday: Closed
Wednesday: 11.00 – 18.00
Thursday: 11.00 – 20.00
Friday: 11.00 – 18.00
Saturday: 11.00 – 18.00
Sunday: 12.00 – 17.00


Last admission 30 minutes before closing time.