Amélie Labourdette’s work documents eerie, grey skeletons of unfinished buildings. Her images are a comment on how we inhabit the world, but they’ve also become pieces of art in their own right – and a hint at what might happen to us all in the future.
At first glance, there’s a clear, socio-political message in Amélie Labourdette’s series, ‘empire of Dust’: the ghostly, grey-concrete skeletons of unfinished villas, flats and dams are a blatant display of the consequences of financial crisis and corruption. And where better to document this than in southern Italy, where corruption seems to have become an artform and the landscape is strewn with concrete foundations that have never been given roofs or walls, like some weird outdoor museum of sculptural art. “the unfinished constructions are the ghosts of the recent economic history of southern Italy,” Labourdette tells us.
The French photographer has just been in London to receive a first-place award in the architecture category of this year’s Sony World Photography Awards, where the jury praised her take on the aesthetic of incompleteness. It’s a topic she has also explored in her previous project in Spain, ‘Non Finito’, but Italy apparently takes the art of the unfinished to a whole new level. “It’s a key to interpreting the architecture of the public sector since the Second World War,” Labourdette says. “It’s an excellent metaphor for bad management of public affairs and embezzlement.”
This story is from the Issue 11, August 2016 edition of Professional Photography.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the Issue 11, August 2016 edition of Professional Photography.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Beauty And The Banal
Head of photographs Phil Prodger explains how William Eggleston used colour experimentally as the National Portrait Gallery opens the largest display of his portrait photography ever seen.
The Art Of The Incomplete
Amélie Labourdette’s work documents eerie, grey skeletons of unfinished buildings. Her images are a comment on how we inhabit the world, but they’ve also become pieces of art in their own right – and a hint at what might happen to us all in the future.
Something Really Wonderful Is Going On
A seagull is suspended, sunlit and spread-winged against a lowering sky. Men unknown to each other march together as if advancing on an unseen enemy. A woman with polished shoes searches through a large, pale handbag. Young girls in matching dresses look to be fleeing impending disaster. Eamonn Doyle shows us fragments of moments in a world of uncertainty and human frailty, with a unique and potentially devastating voice. A relative newcomer to the world of photobooks and photography galleries, he has become a powerful force in the art photography world since 2012.
Share Your Photography, Support A Charity
A new photography competition for positive social change.
Modern-day Daguerreotypes
Jerry Spagnoli has resurrected one of the oldest mediums in photography and adapted it to suit a contemporary clientele. Now museums are starting to pay attention
“With no whipped cream available, we ended up using mentholated shaving foam. Oh, does that sting the eyes!”
“With no whipped cream available, we ended up using mentholated shaving foam. Oh, does that sting the eyes!”
“Everything about his body language just reeked of Capote”
Richard Corman recalls how he summoned the spirit of Avedon to shoot Philip Seymour Hoffman for the Capote poster
FujiFilm X-T2
The Fuji X-T1 brought real class and style to the mirrorless camera market, and now the X-T2 adds speed and resolution.
Stephen Shore's Non-Peak Moments
It is exactly one week after the election of Donald Trump as the 45th President of the United States of America. And from his New York home, Stephen Shore is looking down his computer at me, via the Skype feed that links us, deliberating over the words to express his reaction to the news. “This is going to be a very slow recovery, I think. All over the world it’s been a shock.” The sprightly, silver-haired Shore, who turns 70 this year, pauses for a moment and then neatly diverts the political headline to a subject still relevant to the discussion but of greater concern to him personally.
Carolina Mizrahi
Meet the Brazilian photographer whose work draws on her fashion background and questions how women are represented in today’s society.