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Water dripping on black-hair fringe woman face Photograph

Michele Pero

Italy

Photography, Wet Plate Collodion on Glass

Size: 7.1 W x 9.4 H x 0.1 D in

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About The Artwork

This is Jessica project ‘This is Jessica’ is a title and also an invitation to get introduced to her, because she’s not a professional model. This is her first time ever on a photographic set. This work wants to be an hommage to such a daring girl who has discovered a new herself in front of a lens. ‘This is Jessica’ begins with wet plate collodion photographs. Wherever possible we take two or more shots, so some sets are presented in more options, since every taking is an original. Some plates are converted in negatives so we can offer prints with alternative printing processes such as cyanotypes, Van Dyke brown, salted paper and so on. Check the next galleries. The flaws on the plate Wetplate collodion photography is a very challenging manual process, which involves a lot of steps and chemicals, along with a certain instability of the collodion itself. All these factors combined together yield a result which is often unpredictable and 'dirt". Flaws are a constant with this ancient process and they are - at a quite good amount - unavoidable. These flaws are the core and the soul of my photographic art. I am doing alternative and old techniques on purpose, because they allow me to express my vision in an original way, unbounded by the established canons of today's digital photography. I look for those flaws so that often I keep the plate which is dirt, spotted, covered with metal compounds produced by the process itself. I'm not digitally retouching these plate, unless for a few tiny marks of dirt. The most of the flaws are left, for to give a true 19th century picture to you. These photos are taken using a very old wood-made camera from the early 1900, with a bellows. In this case is a Narita 18x24 cm made by Maison Naert, Bruxelles.

Details & Dimensions

Photography:Wet Plate Collodion on Glass

Original:One-of-a-kind Artwork

Size:7.1 W x 9.4 H x 0.1 D in

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I took my first picture in 1984 and became full time professional photographer in 1992. Throughout the years I could make a wide range of experiences in the fields of commercial photography and photojournalism, as well as in the school system with my own courses and, later on, with my own school of photography. How did it all started? I was introduced to darkroom by photographer Attilio Di Bacco, an expert photographer of my town and, above all, a master darkroom printer. Attilio taught me all the photography tricks and trade secrets so I began my journey into the world of black and white photography. Throughout the nineties and the first years 2000 decade, while I was studying biology at the University of Florence, I began working with a commercial photography studio. My work for the studio would help me to become an expert in all professional photographic techniques. In the same years I was carrying out documentary photography. In 1996 I completed my most important reportage of the times: Albania’s Albanians. Later retitled ‘Albania Felix’ by ‘Sette’ magazine Italy’s first photo-editor Amilcare Ponchielli, it was acclaimed for being the first photo essay on Albania that showed the human side of the country. My Albania, a poor, yet happy country, ‘normal’ in its being different from our culture, went against the trends of photojournalism. Indeed, unlike the most hit photojournalistic subjects such as sad and dirty faces of street children, the despair of the poor and urban neglect, I regarded my subjects with impartial eyes. I was able to go beyond preconceived ideas and stereotypes and thus capture an unexpected reality. A testament to the effectiveness of such an approach to photojournalism came from Giovanna Calvenzi’s assessment, the photo-editor of Lo Specchio magazine and currently one of the top photo-editor in the world: ‘I see you are not a talker. You are not like your colleagues who go on and on about the stories behind their photos… - I replied: – If I had wanted to talk, I would have become a lawyer. I believe a good picture should speak on its own.’ - She bought my photo essay and I got my first commission with her. My photographs have been featured and republished in all Italian newspapers and magazines. They have also been featured in numerous magazines in the world. My series of photographs of Kosovo has been critically acclaimed worldwide for their originality.

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