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By David Ricci

Publisher: MW Editions
Publication date: April 2026
Print length: 160 pages
Language: English
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David Ricci: Hunter Gatherer is a piercing photographic book that examines the overlooked spaces of American resale culture as sites of collective memory and unresolved history. Over the course of seven years, Ricci traveled across the United States, photographing antique malls, flea markets, thrift stores, and curio shops—places where objects from the past quietly circulate, waiting to be claimed again. What emerges is a visual archive of material culture that reveals as much about contemporary America as it does about the eras these objects come from.

Ricci approaches these spaces with the eye of an anthropologist and the restraint of a documentarian. The photographs depict objects exactly as they were found, without staging or intervention. At times the scenes feel absurd or darkly humorous: a praying nun figurine positioned beside a Batman Pez dispenser, kitsch colliding with pop mythology. Elsewhere, the images are deeply unsettling, juxtaposing racist caricatures and stereotyped representations with everyday household items. These uneasy pairings expose how violence, prejudice, and nostalgia coexist within the same visual and commercial ecosystems.

Although no living people appear in the photographs, human presence is everywhere. Figurines, dolls, signage, and collectibles stand in for bodies, beliefs, and long-held assumptions. These surrogate figures seem to converse silently across shelves and aisles, transforming static displays into charged tableaux. Through this absence, Ricci invites viewers to confront the values embedded in objects we inherit, buy, sell, and discard—and to question why such imagery continues to circulate largely unexamined.

Hunter Gatherer positions consumer goods as cultural evidence. The book suggests that resale marketplaces are not neutral zones of nostalgia but repositories of unresolved social narratives. Racism, religious symbolism, beauty standards, and commercial desire are woven together, reflecting the contradictions of a society that often distances itself from its own history while continuing to profit from it.

As with his earlier work, Ricci’s photographs function simultaneously as record and reflection. Hunter Gatherer challenges readers to look closely at what we preserve, what we normalize, and what these objects say about who we are—both individually and collectively.

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