EDITORIALE
Photography is a shadow projected on film of something we’ll never have a concrete, objective experience of, and of which we won’t even know the source of light, just like the prisoners in Plato’s cave, who will never know anything but the mere reflection of the outer world and of their own existence.
(Jean Baudrillard)
Since its birth, photography has had the extraordinary possibility of making visible something that, up to that point, was destined to remain invisible, hidden, or even unknown. Thanks to the revolution operated by the possibility of technically reproducing images, it was possible to document the entire world and thus modern age came to life. The essence of Photography, the representation of what’s real, is indissolubly connected to the notion of reality, just like the concept of light cannot exist without that of darkness, the image of a thing without the thing in itself, the visible without the invisible. The research of the unknown has always moved men along the path to knowledge and within this long haul Art (therefore Photography too) can help us take a few steps forward.
And here we are to us. The photos in this second number of MilanoCittàAperta explore, from different points of view, a common theme: invisibility.
The social invisibility of those minorities who still can’t enjoy many of those rights that we simply take for granted.
The financial invisibility of those who lost their jobs and, with them, the hope of building a future for themselves.
The housing invisibility of those who can’t afford to have a house of their own and are forced, for better and for worse, to earn some space wherever they can.
The physical invisibility of those workers who cross all the non-places between home and work every single morning and evening of their week.
The invisibility in space of those places unseen by the city’s sky, hidden within intricate, dark underground labyrinths.
The historical invisibility of ancient crafts dating from prehistorical times to today that seem to be more and more in danger of disappearing with the development of industrial civilization.
Enjoy your visit (of the invisible).