Background
Gabriele Basilico was born on August 12, 1944 in Milan, Italy.
(A prized collection of more than 300 photographs, this be...)
A prized collection of more than 300 photographs, this beautiful statement of urban life traces the stories of such cities as Rotterdam and Barcelona, Antwerp and Valencia, Nice, Frankfurt, and Genoa. The combination of street signs, billboards, cars, bridges, roads, trains, ships, and cranes refashions the city from what some deem chaos into a testament of human creativity and artistic freedom. The images explore the complex interrelationships between the human-made, constructed environment and the natural one—as well as the connections these international cities have with each other.
https://www.amazon.com/Cityscapes-Gabriele-Basilico/dp/B005X4H0Z6/?tag=2022091-20
2008
(Venice's Giardini di Castello has been home to the exhibi...)
Venice's Giardini di Castello has been home to the exhibition pavilions of the International Art Biennale since 1895. As part of the thirteenth Architecture Biennale, various architects, philosophers, art historians, and artists were asked to write an essay on the pavilions. The text is accompanied both by an installation presenting the authors' descriptions and by Gabriele Basilico's photographs of the buildings.
https://www.amazon.com/Pavilions-Gardens-Biennale-Gabriele-Basilico/dp/8869654400/?tag=2022091-20
Gabriele Basilico was born on August 12, 1944 in Milan, Italy.
Gabriele Basilico originally studied to become an architect before pursuing a career in photography. He earned a degree in architecture (1973) from Polytechnic University of Milan.
His initial works focused around traditional landscape photography, but Gabriele Basilico later shifted his focus to architectural photography due to the influence of his previous studies in architecture. He achieved international fame in 1982 with his photographic report on the industrial areas of Milan, "Ritratti di Fabbriche, Sugarco". Gabriele Basilico made the film Milano, Proletariato Giovanile in 1976 for the Venice Biennale. In the mid 1980s Gabriele Basilico was part of a group of photographers commissioned by the French Government to document the transformation of the Transalpine landscape.
His last public work was showcased in December 2012, at the inauguration of a new square, Gae Aulenti, in Milan. The work consisted of a series of photographs that portrayed the Porta Nuova Project from its inception through completion.
(A prized collection of more than 300 photographs, this be...)
2008(Venice's Giardini di Castello has been home to the exhibi...)