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Maurizio Galimberti: 'Food Photography? I Prefer Eating Food'

04 February, 2017
Vucciria

Photo Maurizio Galimberti

In the past, we featured another work of yours associated with food, Emmental: how would you define your relationship with food photography?
I interrelate with food as a consumer rather than a photographer. I usually prefer to photograph the city and I am rarely engaged in food photography projects: however, when I do work with food, I try to make it part of my own poetic vision. In ’98, I carried out a project with Gianni Giansanti entitled Provincia vo cercando, curated by Grazia Neri, whose aim was to describe the Italian province of Alessandria also through its traditional dishes: this is a poetic work. I also photographed the famous Milanese-style risotto with saffron (Zafferano e riso alla milanese D’O) signed by chef Davide Oldani who is a great friend of mine: the dish was a pretext for me to put a particular design concept into practice.

Is there any project or Italian food photographer that has caught your eye or aroused your interest?
In food photography, there is generally a great deal of minimalism but not much pathos: no Italian photographer has surfed the wave of successful chefs, leaving an indelible mark as an author in the ambit of food. Conversely, this is exactly what celebrity chefs have managed to achieve. I have seen some interesting photographs of Massimo Bottura’s dishes by Per-Anders Jorgensen and Thomas Ruhl, as well as some photo shoots of the restaurant Le Calandre in Rubano, near Padua (chef Massimiliano Alajmo's 3-Michelin starred restaurant) by Brazilian photographer Sergio Coimbra, but I cannot say I know of many photographers with a huge personality who have made a lasting impression on me.

What is the biggest challenge to address when photographing food?
That of being myself, and deploying my project developing skills with poetic lightness. What counts most is to deliver a personal interpretation by going beyond the aesthetic appeal of the dish. I personally handle food in the same way as a cosmic concept. I enjoyed enlarging Oldani’s dish and enhancing it with my use of fragmentation: my mosaic endows it with meaning and pathos. It is a dish steeped in love, one the chef strongly identifies with, even when broken up into fragments.

Do you have any more food photography projects in the pipeline?
No, nothing in the way of food. What I like to photograph most are cities. Then, in the evening, I eat out in places where they serve generous helpings!

And what about new exhibitions or books?
Next 9 February, a group exhibition dedicated to artist and painter Mimmo Rotella will be inaugurated in Milan at the Dada East gallery. Then, in March, during the Mia Photo Fair held in Milan, a book entitled Parigi will be launched to celebrate 20 years of Paris-inspired photography. Besides this, I am working on an editorial project about New York.

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