Recapturing Scampia’s beauty

23 October 2017   •  
Written by Molly Sisson
Recapturing Scampia's beauty

Photographer Simona Ghizzoni uses her camera with a distinct intention to render the injustice of social issues through an intimate observation, extending the boundaries of photojournalism and moulding it to create personal, yet engaging photos in her series Il Mare non bagna Napoli  “The Sea doesn’t reach Naples – ed”. Her series is on display at the Photo-reporter Festival at the Bay of Saint-Brieu until the 5th of November.

Simona Ghizzoni, a selected photographer for the 2017 edition of the Photo-reporter Festival puts forth her most recent photography collection. The series Il Mare non bagna Napoli  is an interactive photographic experience between herself and her subjects : the children of Naples. In a festival where all contenders are evoking society’s pressing issues, Simona explores “the deprivation of art amongst the teenagers of Naples”. Simona preserves her distinct interest in humanity and society while creating an emotional narrative through each picture. She exclaims that “with the economy collapsing it is affecting Naples middle-class, consequently having a striking effect on the outskirts, notably in the ghettos“.

The children became my tour guide of the area”

A quest for beauty

Simona started this project after visiting Scampia on a work assignment, from then her heart was set on investigating the area through photography. An idea that had been close to her heart for a while, she soon put it to practice. From working with series of female genital mutilation as well as eating disorders, both vaguely touch on the subject of children; Il Mare non bagna Napoli is hence an infusion of diverse aspects from her past projects. Here, she wanted to concentrate on children specifically in a setting close to home : Scampia in Naples. Simona Ghizzoni created the project with the help of an association ‘Chi Rom e… Chi No’, joining with local children as well as those from the Roma camp. The series is a narrative between Simona’s observations contrasted with the children’s perceptions of their surroundings, while they intervene and interact with the camera. The concrete jungle, manipulated to the children’s taste while they use the camera, is an acute response to the problems that they are faced with. Simona explains when the children were searching for subjects to shoot to later display they would turn to nature and beauty. This series focal points differ between the children’s gaze completed by the photographers interest upon the crucial issues within the ghetto. The soft tones of Simona’s work, apparent in her style, contrasts with the bleak, harsh realities of surroundings.

© Simona Ghizzoni
© Simona Ghizzoni
© Simona Ghizzoni
© Simona Ghizzoni
© Simona Ghizzoni
© Simona Ghizzoni

© Simona Ghizzoni

© Simona Ghizzoni

© Simona Ghizzoni© Simona Ghizzoni

Photos by © Simona Ghizzoni

Explore
Instagram selection #312
Instagram selection #312
Through portraits or landscapes, the artists of our Instagram selection #312 never stop experimenting. All of them seek new textures and...
24 August 2021   •  
Written by Joachim Delestrade
Salvador Dalí, lava lamps and Rock en Seine: Emma Birski's Chinese portrait
Salvador Dalí, lava lamps and Rock en Seine: Emma Birski’s Chinese portrait
"Photography is a way of expressing myself and staging things that I imagine beautiful, but that I will never see in real life," Emma...
18 August 2021   •  
Written by Finley Cutts
Instagram selection #310
Instagram selection #310
Magic, fantasy, abstraction, humour... By playing with genres and emotions, the photographers of our Instagram selection #310 highlight...
10 August 2021   •  
Written by Fisheye Magazine
Readers picks #352
Readers picks #352
Both passionate about the photographic medium since childhood, Samantha Lomprez and Margot Gremillon – our readers picks #352 – find in...
09 August 2021   •  
Written by Lou Tsatsas
Our latest articles
View all articles
Readers picks #355
Readers picks #355
Alexander Kaller and Stephen Sillifant, our readers picks #355, both escape the frenzy of our world to produce peaceful images – a...
30 August 2021   •  
Written by Fisheye Magazine
British seaside, round animals and Céline Sciamma: Max Miechowski's Chinese portrait
British seaside, round animals and Céline Sciamma: Max Miechowski’s Chinese portrait
Trained as a musician, British artist Max Miechowski turned to photography after a long trip to Southeast Asia. Portraits...
25 August 2021   •  
Written by Lou Tsatsas
Instagram selection #312
Instagram selection #312
Through portraits or landscapes, the artists of our Instagram selection #312 never stop experimenting. All of them seek new textures and...
24 August 2021   •  
Written by Joachim Delestrade
The labourer who turned mud into silver
The labourer who turned mud into silver
With Zilverbeek (Silver creek), Lucas Leffler explores the myth of a worker who made his wealth from the mud that lined the bottom of a...
23 August 2021   •  
Written by Finley Cutts