EVERY PICTURE TELLS….

Every picture tells a story, as someone once said.

An image can portray the beauty of an instant. The music of an instant and even being able to be seen later by others

A picture can even capture that instant almost imperceptible to many,
instants like a reflection in a puddle, the mist caressing the buildings and statues, or perhaps gondolas caressing each other without touching, moved by the waves.
The photograph’s characteristic that confers to that instant a kind of immortality and the ability to create in the viewer the perception of the photographer, or even a different one

A photography is an expression of art, an act of beauty, as art itself is always a rebellion against the dogmatically modern system.
It is the presence and subtlety of the photographer in that precise place and moment to transform that instant into art. To realize the communion between the right moment and the perfect light.

That fantastic place called Venice where countless objects, people, nationalities, magics and stories merge all together to create more magic, mysteries, , black nobility, carnivals, adventures, music and characters, also with the Marco Polo’s travels to distant destinations,

Wander and get lost in the streets of this and you will find it everywhere, look closer and you will find it.

Man Ray said he believed in the relationship between music and photography and that this was his inspiration.

Mozart also walked those small streets and he heard a music work that was played only once a year on a special occasion in this city ; its music scores were kept secret, He played it completely later just for listening to it only once. Too bad that was not possible to take a picture of that moment

Walking down the way towards Chiesa della Salute attracted by a brightness emanating from a photograph on display in a very beautiful shop
From all the magnificent photos that can to be found in Venice, this one had a particular magic.
The energy that emanated from that black and white photo suggested that it was not a photo that belonged to Venice but Venice that belonged to that photo.

The artist who was able to do this is called Federico Sutera

I consider absolutely useless to add any annotation since it is not necessary, the images below these lines speak for themselves.
And here more than ever a picture is worth a thousand words

Scroll to Top