Studio Visit, Elena Del Rivero

#SendaInTheCity

A peek into Elena Del Rivero‘s studio in the heart of the East Village reveals walls adorned with her latest works of art and several unfinished pieces, each a testament to his artistic prowess.

Valencian artist Elena Del Rivero was kind enough to invite us into her studio in the heart of the East Village , share with us their latest work and pamper ourselves with a cup of tea. As we sat and drank, we talked about the latest art trends in New York, her life in the city, and her relationship with Spain. Each turn of the conversation shedding new light on the vicissitudes of her singular artistic career.

Elena’s visit was not only an opportunity for us to catch up on the latest happenings in the art world, but also to learn about her ongoing projects. Before leaving the studio, Del Rivero shared with us his latest project, “Home Address,” a tribute to the suffragette movement that was presented the next day at New York City Hall for International Women’s Day.

Anna Malagrida presents “L’Attente” at La Filature, Mulhouse

An essential artist on the contemporary scene, Anna Malagrida, has been working in photography and videography since the late 90s with impressive consistency. Malagrida addresses political issues with great poetic delicacy and subtly works the staging, the play of light and chiaroscuro, confusing photography and pictorial art in the same gesture.

Anna Malagrida expresses the personal representation of the city of Paris through her images: the globalized city, on its walls and facades, appears as a skin that bears the traces of the events and crises it is going through.

Exhibition from January 17th to March 5th, 2023 at La Filature, Mulhouse
Tuesday to Sunday from 2pm to 6pm + show nights
(La Filature will be closed to the public from February 12 to 26.)

For more information you can visit the La Filature website through this link:

The Central Library of Cantabria hosts the work of the Italian photographer Massimo Vitali

Since 1993, the Italian Massimo Vitali stands on a platform several meters high, and with a large camera he photographs beaches, nightclubs, ski resorts, supermarkets, swimming pools and other busy leisure areas.

The work of this contemporary photographer embodies the essence of leisure activity in the summer season.

But there’s more than meets the eye when it comes to this author’s idyllic seascapes. Vitali responded to the political turmoil in Italy in the 1940s, launching his beach series in the mid-1990s as a political commentary on mass tourism and social complacency. While Vitali’s photographs seem to depict the paradisiacal appearance from each place he captures, his work actually focuses on the individuals who appear in the composition and their collective response to society.

Using the beach as a platform for social research, Vitali sought to photograph bathers in their most vulnerable state in order to document society in its most authentic state Most of the artist’s work captures tourist destinations in Italy as it retains the idea that taking quality photos does not necessarily require traveling outside of your local community. Some of the famous places immortalized in Vitali’s work include Spargi Cala Corsara Cala Mariolu Porto Miggiano and Cefalù Viareggio however Vitali has since it has expanded beyond the borders of Italy to vacation spots in Brazil, Greece, Turkey and Spain.

Massimo Vitali photographs the latest outdoor furniture | Wallpaper*
Massimo Vitali, by Wallpaper*

Since the start of his iconic beach series, Vitali has continued to explore the natural environment, but instead focused on the impact of human disturbance on nature In contrast to his coastal scenes, Vitali focuses less on the pleasure and leisure of people and, instead, in the complex relationship between humans and their impact on the environment his most recent series entitled Disturbed Coastal Systems (April 2017) reveals an implicit message of the tension built between the man and nature.

Dates

08.09.2022- 02.10.2022

Organizer
Government of Cantabria. General Directorate of Culture and PHotoESPAÑA

Headquarters

Central Library of CantabriaC/ Ruiz de Alda, 19, 39009 Santander

Schedule

Mon-Fri / Mon-Fri: 09:00 – 21:00

Sat-Sun; fest / Sat-Sun; Hol: 11:00 a.m. – 8:00 p.m.

Entrance
Free entry / Admission free

More information about this artist and his work on our website.

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