Mario Giacomelli (1925–2000) stands among the most influential figures in postwar Italian photography, a self-taught artist whose vision reshaped the boundaries of the medium. Born in the small Adriatic town of Senigallia, Giacomelli left school at the age of thirteen to work as a typesetter, later serving briefly in the Italian army. His path to art was far from conventional: in 1950, he opened a small printshop in his hometown, and three years later, he purchased his first camera. What began as a curiosity quickly evolved into a lifelong exploration of image-making, where the darkroom became a place of invention and transformation.
Giacomelli approached photography as a field of experimentation, manipulating film and paper to create stark contrasts and bold compositions that captured the psychological texture of postwar Italy. His landscapes of the Marche region—rolling hills, furrowed vineyards, and solitary figures—became metaphors for resilience and renewal. The rural terrain, seen through his lens, transforms into near-abstract compositions, echoing the emotional power of contemporary painting while remaining deeply rooted in the land and its people.
His portraits and scenes of everyday life, gathered under the series
La Gente (The People), reveal an unvarnished intimacy with his subjects. Whether depicting farmers, priests, or children at play, Giacomelli’s photographs blend compassion and melancholy, reflecting the contradictions of a society emerging from war into a period of rapid modernization known as
il miracolo economico italiano.
The exhibition
Mario Giacomelli: La Gente, La Terra presents 36 photographs spanning from 1955 to 1980, drawn entirely from the Santa Barbara Museum of Art’s collection. Together, the portfolios
La Gente and
Paesaggio (Landscape) form a poetic dialogue between humanity and nature, offering a timeless vision of Italy’s enduring spirit. The
Paesaggio portfolio is a recent gift from Carol Vernon and Robert Turbin, enriching the museum’s collection with Giacomelli’s singular vision of light, shadow, and life.
Image:
Mario Giacomelli, Storie di terra from the portfolio "Paesaggio," 1955, printed 1981. Gelatin silver print. SBMA, Gift of Carol Vernon and Robert Turbin in Memory of Marjorie and Leonard Vernon, 2025.10.1. © Mario Giacomelli