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Paolo Pellegrin

    Paolo Pellegrin Fotografie
    As I Was Dying
    Paolo Pellegrin
    Paolo Pellegrin. La fragile meraviglia
    Leros
    Double Blind
    • 2022

      Paolo Pellegrin. La fragile meraviglia

      • 153 pages
      • 6 hours of reading

      This monograph, accompanying the inaugural exhibition at the new Intesa Sanpaolo museum in Piazza San Carlo, Turin, showcases the work of Italian photojournalist Paolo Pellegrin, focusing on his photographic reportages about climate change. Pellegrin, a master of contemporary international photography, has throughout his career documented our era's reality with a rare awareness of photography's dual as a witness to reality and an instrument for exploring subjectivity. This collection of images centers on a pivotal contemporary humanity's relationship with nature.

      Paolo Pellegrin. La fragile meraviglia
    • 2009

      Paolo Pellegrin

      • 96 pages
      • 4 hours of reading

      *These groundbreaking images are a must-have for all photography aficionados *An original voice at the intersection of journalism and fine art Paolo Pellegrin is a journalistic and fine-art photographer with few equals. As well as becoming a full member of Magnum in 2005, he is a contract photographer for Newsweek. The recipient of many prizes, he has achieved various awards including eight World Press Photo and numerous Photographer of the Year accolades. Taking photographs worldwide, his subjects often include the underprivileged and those caught in political conflicts. Pellegrin's painterly images are both evocative and remarkably original. He is also a celebrity photographer in his own right, profiling some of the most famous faces of our time. ILLUSTRATIONS 60 colour & b/w photos

      Paolo Pellegrin
    • 2002
    • 1998

      The Greek island of Leros was for 20 years and more the site of the world's most notorious and brutal asylum for the insane. The Magnum photographer Alex Majoli has chronicled its inmates and their return to a sane world and integration into society, the work of the famed Italian psychiatrist Franco Basaglia. Leros raises a number of questions. How could such a regime have existed? And how could anyone have survived it? This book was given the Judges' Special Recognition in the best books category of the International Pictures of the Year Awards 2003 and included in the PDN Photography Annual 2003 in the best books category.

      Leros