Gaia Adducchio

Gaia Adducchio

Location: Italy

Gaia Adducchio is an Italian artist based in Rome. After studying film directing at FAMU, the National Film School of Prague, and winning numerous prizes for her documentary and fictional works she gains two MIBACT funding-awards for the realization of a documentary and the development of a feature film. In 2015 she wins an artistic residence at the prestigious photography school CSF Adams in Rome, which leads to the realization of her first photographic project “Family Portraits” debuting during Prague Photo 2016 and gaining a special mention at the first Biennale di Arte Moderna di Perugia.
“Naked:#she”, her 2nd project, is shown at Prague Photo 2017; is part of Emerging Talent 2018/19; in February 2020 attends Salon Comparaisons in Paris.
Her third project “Étoiles” debuts during Prague Photo 2018. In February 2019 is shown at Salon Comparaisons and in October 2019 at Salon d’Automne in Paris.
A selection from her forth project “Polaroid Blooming” is part of Salon d’Automne in October 2021 and again in October 2022, in February 2022 of Salon Comparaisons in Paris. In September 2022 is part of the contemporary art collective “When in Rome” curated by Rodshir Dailë for Dailë Galerie at the Rome Soho House.
In February 2023 a selection of her latest project “Naked:#he” is shown at the Salon Comparaisons in Paris.
From March 2019 on she realizes a several solo exhibitions both in Rome and abroad.
In November 2021 she is guest of honor at Prague Photo 2021, with a solo exhibition curated by Luisa Briganti and Gabriele Agostini, artistic director Iva Nesvadbova.
In February 2022 her new solo exhibition "Polaroid Blooming” by the art historian Beatrice Luzi is shown at Art G.A.P. Gallery in Rome. In October 2022 a new edition of the solo exhibition, curated by the art historian Beatrice Luzi, is shown at FdF AquAstyle in Rome, organizers Edmund Kurenia and Francesco De Fabiis.
In August 2022 she is part of “Segni: Festival della fotografia” in Capo di Ponte, Valcamonica with her solo exhibition “Ritratti – Portraits” curated by Graziano Filippini and Veronica Marioli.


Portfolio:

Étoiles

“How much does humankind know about itself? According to what experience tells us, very little. Therefor we still have much space for subconscious mind.”
Gustav Jung – ” The archetypes and the collective unconscious “- 1977

I like to think of a piece of art as a creature in a fair through which an artist exposes him/herself in the attempt of communicating thoughts and feelings born from an expressive urge otherwise difficult to deal with, in an ambiguous condition of vulnerability and self-satisfaction. A way of exposing oneself for which it feels worth asking for great sacrifices both to oneself and to others, at the mercy of an occasional voyeuristic public with, as if staring at a freak show, ambivalent feelings swinging between identification and distance.
I chose ballet dancing because among the artistic forms it’s the one that in a more emblematic key is hiding beyond its grace and harmony a strength, an almost violent discipline over body and soul. I chose the masks in order to transform, as usual, my subjects into only apparently objectified archetypes. I chose the double exposure with the wall because to me there is no attempt of human expression that transcends the ferocious battle against death and oblivion.

Étoiles - Untitled (Rullino 38 - Foto 17A) “Étoiles - Untitled (Rullino 38 - Foto 17A)”

The project here proposed is based on analog photos. Print size: 8×12 cm, with passé-partout 25×25. All the prints are gelatin silver prints on baryta paper and sepia toned, realized by the author herself.

Étoiles - Untitled (Rullino 42 - Foto 23) “Étoiles - Untitled (Rullino 42 - Foto 23)”

The project here proposed is based on analog photos. Print size: 8×12 cm, with passé-partout 25×25. All the prints are gelatin silver prints on baryta paper and sepia toned, realized by the author herself.

Family Portraits

“In the same way I worked back through a life, not my own, but the life of someone I love.”
Roland Barthes – Camera Lucida. Reflections on photography -1980

The Ritratti di famiglia – Family Portraits project is the result of a series of aesthetic choices finalized to a specific symbolic content.
The pictures represent a playful greeting from the people I love the most from a faraway dimension. The people portraits using a double exposure on a single frame realized directly in the moment of the shutter click (and not in post-production/darkroom) all belong to my most intimate sphere - dear friends, close and very close family members such as my daughters, my husband, and my father.
This photographic sequence reflects on the awareness, present also during the happiest moments of my life, that one day all of them will cease to exist. It represents therefore my personal attempt of recognizing time, of dealing with the fear given by this awareness.
These pictures, like a sort of “dress rehearsal”, force me to an imaginary confrontation with the inevitable eventual absence of my beloved ones. The figures, sometimes almost unrecognizable, represent the image that I could have of them in my memories to come. The recollection of my dear ones takes distance from a simple representation and describes the sense of loss and absence, giving back portraits with uncertain profiles and frequently estranged features.
The decision of shooting the double exposure directly on a single frame is not a mere formal choice, but a metaphor of our condition as human beings at the mercy of life’s events. Not being able to fully control the final result of a photo makes every single frame an “individual” with a unique and unpredictable existential path.
Representative of such choice are the so called “dark stripes”, present in all those photos where the two shots were not perfectly congruent. The stripes, by sometimes revealing evocative details, other times appearing as simple geometrical figures inside the picture frame, tell of our vulnerability and the perception of chance driving our existence.

Gaia Adducchio

Family Portraits (Rullino 17 - Foto 36A) “Family Portraits (Rullino 17 - Foto 36A)”

The project here proposed is based on analog photos. All the prints are gelatin silver prints on baryta paper, realized by the author herself.

Family Portraits (Rullino 4 - Foto 34A) “Family Portraits (Rullino 4 - Foto 34A)”

The project here proposed is based on analog photos. All the prints are gelatin silver prints on baryta paper, realized by the author herself.

Polaroid Blooming

“Motionless, stare into space, I was sinking in regions I thought were unreachable…”
Stanisław Lem – Solaris – 1961

The project “Polaroid blooming”, comprehending a body of work of more than 50 images, is born from the necessity to abandon oneself to less codified expressive channels, during the quest for additional creative freedom.
By adopting typical techniques of abstract painting to instant photography (specifically a re-elaboration of grattage skills by scrapping emulsion on polaroid support) and by working with analog and digital means, I intended to realize images that allow, both during the creative process and the act of fruition, to let oneself go to unconscious and potentially liberating automatisms.
From the beginning, from the first application of the emulsion on the surface, until the final details of digital postproduction, references given by the interaction between texture, color and form are shaped in my mind.
Immersive texture, forms and colors which are synonymous of dynamism and at the same time of contemplation and abandonment of senses, in the hope that who is looking at the works can lose him- or herself not in mine, but in his/her unconscious, emotional and cultural references.
Gaia Adducchio

Polaroid Blooming - Untitled n° 46 “Polaroid Blooming - Untitled n° 46”

The project is composed by more than 50 photos. Each image is the result of a scanned, digitally post-produced polaroid frame and is printed just as one single, non-reproducible piece.

Polaroid Blooming - Untitled n° 19 “Polaroid Blooming - Untitled n° 19”

The project is composed by more than 50 photos. Each image is the result of a scanned, digitally post-produced polaroid frame and is printed just as one single, non-reproducible piece.