
"Senza titolo, Tricarico 1967 - Milano 1972"
[Untitled, Tricarico 1967 - Milan 1972], 1972
Print and tempera paint on photosensitive canvas
© Mario Cresci
Mario Cresci »
Geometries / Epiphanies
Exhibition: 14 Mar – 24 Jun 2025

Large Glass
392 Caledonian Road
N1 1DN London
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Wed-Sat 11-18

"Coesistenze #05, dallaserie Misurazioni, Matera 1975 - Bergamo 2015"
[From the series Measurements, Matera 1975 - Bergamo 2015], 2015
Giclée Fine Art print on Baryta paper
© Mario Cresci
Mario Cresci
"Geometries / Epiphanies"
Exhibition: 14 March – 24 May 2025
Curated by Luca Fiore
"Geometries/Epiphanies" is the first exhibition of work by the Italian
photographer Mario Cresci (b.1941) in the Uk. The selection shows
Cresci’s experimental photography practice, which draws inspiration
from Pop Art, Conceptual art and Industrial design, and his long-term
artistic project documenting the southern Italian town of Matera.
In the early 1970s, Cresci collaborated with the interdisciplinary research
group Polis to produce an urban study of Tricarico, a village close to
Matera, the territory had become a symbol of southern Italian
'backwardness' in the years following the publication of Carlo Levi’s
memoir 'Cristo si è fermato a Eboli'. Cresci was encouraged to use his
camera to open dialogues with local residents and give them an
opportunity to represent themselves through their histories and traditions,
such as farming and craftsmanship. The project resulted in a series of
images that continue to be influential in Cresci’s artistic practice to this
day. During his many years in Matera, Cresci focused on the region’s
material culture, particularly the objects crafted by local artisans, such as
tools and hand-carved wooden toys, which the artist interpreted as a
portal to the town’s culture, memory, and sentiment.
Cresci also developed his experimental photography techniques in work
outside of Matera. In 1968 the artist moved to Rome, where the L’Attico
gallery commissioned him to photograph exhibitions of leading figures in
the Italian art scene at the time, including Pino Pascali, Jannis Kounellis,
Eliseo Mattiacci, Michelangelo Pistoletto, and Alighiero Boetti. Here he
developed the conviction that photography could no longer be simply
exhibited by hanging it on a wall.

Detail from "Dalla serie Ritra, reali, Tricarico 1972"
[From the series Real Portraits, Tricarico 1972], 1972
Giclée Fine Art print on cotton Baryta paper
© Mario Cresci
Many artists have sought to push photographic language beyond its
"traditional" boundaries by engaging with conceptual art and
experimentation and in Cresci’s case, he has found new technological
alphabets while staying deeply connected to the nature and culture of
places—though never in a didactic way. His vision always holds a spark
that surprises us and which is capable of offering true epiphanies.
Mario Cresci, born 1942 in Chiavari, Italy, lives and works in Bergamo.
Cresci attended the school of Industrial Design in Venice, and currently
teaches at the ISIA University in Urbino. He has held solo exhibitions at
major museums and institutions including MAXXI, Museo Nazionale
delle Arti del XXI secolo, Rome; GAM, Galleria d'Arte Moderna and
CAMERA, Centro Italiano per la Fotografia, Turin; GAMeC, Galleria
d'Arte Moderna e Contemporanea, Bergamo.
His work was included in the recent "REVERSING THE EYE, Arte Povera and Beyond 1960-75:
Photography, Film, Video"" exhibition at Jeu de Paume, Paris.
Important publications include Matera. Images and
Documents (1975), Measurements. Photography and Territory (1979)
and Segni Migranti. Storia di grafica e fotografia (2019), winner of the Prix
du Livre Historique, at Les Rencontres Arles in 2020.
Luca Fiore is a writer, critic and curator of photography based in Milan,
Italy. He is a regular contributor to Aperture, Il Foglio, Domani, Il Giornale
dell’Arte and Tracce. He curated the exhibition "Mon cher Abbé Bionaz!
Mario Cresci for the Aosta Valley"", at Museo Castello Gamba in Châtillon
in 2023.

"La bimba di Tricarico, dalla serie Fotogrammi d’affezione, 1967"
[From the Photograms of Affection series, 1967], 1967
Heliographic print on film
© Mario Cresci

"Stigliano, 1982 (in Viaggio in Italia, 1984)", 1982
Giclée Fine Art print on Canson Baryta paper
© Mario Cresci