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By David Ricci

Publisher: MW Editions
Publication date: March 2026
Print length: 160 pages
Language: English
Price Range:
American photographer David Ricci spent seven years traveling across the United States documenting a little-seen visual landscape: the country’s resale underworld of antique malls, flea markets, curio shops, and thrift stores.

His series Hunter Gatherer explores these spaces where forgotten objects from the past are recirculated into the present, revealing more than nostalgia or kitsch. Through carefully observed photographs, Ricci uncovers the cultural codes embedded in everyday items for sale—objects that quietly expose layers of American identity shaped by history, commerce, faith, race, and mythmaking.

Working without staging or intervention, he photographed displays exactly as he encountered them. Some scenes feel absurdly humorous, such as a devotional nun figurine posed beside a pop-culture toy dispenser. Others are more unsettling: racist caricatures and stereotyped figurines appear casually arranged alongside ordinary household goods, forcing viewers to confront how prejudice can persist in plain sight. These unexpected juxtapositions transform flea-market tables into mirrors reflecting the contradictions of a nation still negotiating its past.

Although people never physically appear in the photographs, human presence is felt everywhere. The objects—posed dolls, religious icons, decorative statues, toys, and memorabilia—seem to converse silently, suggesting unseen owners, imagined histories, and unspoken beliefs. Each frame becomes a kind of stage where social narratives unfold, turning still lifes into charged visual theater.

Rather than offering direct commentary, Hunter Gatherer invites viewers to look closely and draw their own conclusions. Ricci’s lens functions as both witness and questioner, prompting reflection on what societies choose to keep, discard, and resell. The project ultimately reveals that secondhand objects are never just things; they are vessels of memory and ideology. By isolating and reframing them, Ricci exposes the subtle yet persistent values that continue to shape contemporary American culture.

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