Stories Valentina Sommariva, photographer of fissures Text by Alessandro Ronchi Photo by Valentina Sommariva Add to bookmarks Sheats Goldstein House, ph. Valentina Sommariva Born in Milan in 1986, her professional life encompasses a number of fields: design, interiors, still lifes, portraits, children, travel and the landscape. Casa Valentina Moretti, Brescia, ph. Valentina Sommariva Her Cicatrici [Scars] series dwells on the marks left by the earthquake that rocked Central Italy in 2016 – of various kinds, they are to be found on the land, on the skin of survivors and on residential spaces. There’s a sense of fracture, and Sommariva’s personal projects evidence a specific and thematic interest in the concept of permeability and migration, changing states, subsidence, discontinuities, and plunder, which permeates her karstic photography. It surfaces in different areas of her work, such as advertising campaigns (set in one case literally inside a quarry, or amid alien-looking dolomitic landscapes) and in her photos of interiors in which architecture and nature often switch planes. There are a number of Wunderkammers, antonomastic places of fusion, juxtaposition and protean multiplicity. Sommariva’s camera tends to pause on places of potential transit, an opening, a gaping wound, a threshold. Giuseppe Penone, ph. Valentina Sommariva Lamborghini, ph. Valentina Sommariva Waiting for a Superman, ph. Valentina Sommariva Argentina, ph. Valentina Sommariva Ph. Valentina Sommariva Los Angeles, ph. Valentina Sommariva Tokio, ph. Valentina Sommariva 2 April 2022 Share See AlsoOther Articles Stories The holiday library. 5 important books to savor tranquilly From Robert Wilson’s chairs to fables about the Castiglioni brothers. From the Compasso d’Oro to Beatrice Leanza’s thoughts and a bookazine on luxury. Essential reading for all those with a passion for the topic. Patrizia Malfatti Exhibitions The latest outdoor furnishing, championing sustainability, material and colour Comfortable and sustainable, outdoor furnishing lends itself to many different interpretations, channelling innovation and constantly evolving aesthetics Marilena Pitino Stories The biology of light, according to Manuel Spitschan What does chronobiology have to do with design? Manuel Spitschan, professor at the Technische Universität München, explains why light is essential to our well-being. And why designers should know more about it to design better. Giulia Zappa
Stories The holiday library. 5 important books to savor tranquilly From Robert Wilson’s chairs to fables about the Castiglioni brothers. From the Compasso d’Oro to Beatrice Leanza’s thoughts and a bookazine on luxury. Essential reading for all those with a passion for the topic. Patrizia Malfatti
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