Per un paesaggio possibile
Andrea Camiolo
What is a landscape? If it’s already difficult to answer this question, even from a definitional point of view, it becomes even more complex to answer the question of how landscapes are represented.
With this premise as a starting point, my research analyses a modest Sicilian hilly landscape, which becomes the archetype of the ideal landscape – proposing a series of possible representations to the viewer. From a drawing on paper to a satellite image, from the word “landscape” printed in a dictionary to a screenshot of the source code of a .jpg file, from a scan of a 4x5 negative to a still-life of small stones taken from the chosen site; each of these representations reveals a distinct vision of the same landscape. The landscape then becomes the sum of all these proposed images, and – as in the final scene of Abbas Kiarostami’s Taste of Cherry – the photographic medium is then revealed. The effect reminds the viewer of the illusion and artificiality of each of these individual representations, and the consequent impossibility of answering the initial question.
Andrea Camiolo (b. 1998) is an Italian photographer. He graduated in 2020 from the European Institute of Design in Turin, and in 2023 obtained an MA in Photography at the Academy of Fine Arts in Catania. Camiolo’s work has been recognised by a series of international prizes and showcases, including the Comisso Award, Paris Photo Carte Blanche, Giovane Fotografia Italiana #10, and the Best Portfolio Award at Ragusa Photo Festival. His work has been exhibited in group shows throughout Italy, as well as in Switzerland and the United Arab Emirates. Camiolo is co-founder of DORSOPRESS, an independent publishing house focused on contemporary photography.
The Manhattan Project
The Manhattan Project collects photographs of various experiments related to the use of nuclear explosives in the 1940s. The small-format negatives were found on an abandoned US military base in Sicily. Over time, the images suffered considerable deterioration, producing an overabundance of grain and diminished sharpness. This could be a perfect incipit to deceive the viewer; a story that makes sense of photographs that make no sense. In fact, these aren’t even photographs; they’re photo-realistic images produced by artificial intelligence.
Starting with descriptions and scans of photographs from the 1977 book Evidence by Larry Sultan and Mike Mandel, an AI-tool generated new images, which were later manipulated in post-production, culminating in a series of fake pictures. What are we standing in front of? To whom do these images belong? To the photographers who took the pictures in the 1940s? To Larry Sultan and Mike Mandel, who selected them from thousands of others as they dug through US federal archives in the 1970s? Or to those who took the 12 billion photographs through which the AI generated these images by way of a deep-learning algorithm? Do they belong to the Artificial Intelligence itself, or to the person who clicked the ‘generate’ button on the computer?
In a short circuit of belonging, these images ask many questions without providing answers. The vision of an explosion – and the images related to it – is what we’re left with. Non-real images that speak to reality and the present; fake archival artefacts that connect to the present day – as we talk again about world war and nuclear testing.