The encounter with the De Pietri allowed a better understanding of the design dynamics and operational strategies at play in the Istanbul new stories exhibition, bringing to light De Pietri's path and relationship with this contemporary city, which began by shooting in the 1990's with Dittici [1] or Via…, n… [2]. Here, fragments of everyday life carved out by careful observation become, in the author's photographic vision, visual archetypes of urban vitality, operational tools that can freeze evolving situations — from public spaces in the old city, to WWII sites, to metropolitan fringes, new conquered lands. The analysis and layering begins with the deep study of civic conditions, transcending the trite visual stereotypes that pigeonhole Istanbul as a city with marked relational qualities.
Istanbul exists in an understandable dichotomy between its historical context and frontier territories. The fringe belt becomes a place to affirm a life-style and cultural model that abandons — substantiated by real estate speculation — the traditional territory of inhabiting.
If "the important part of a photo is that part lying outside the frame, because the visible part is only a hint for being able to imagine the rest" [3], the photographs in the exhibition open a fantastic subtext of aspects related to inhabiting, relationships, use and the intermediate condition, with everyone becoming capable of projecting his/her own mental image on peripheral landscapes, strewn with animal presences rather than human ones. Places like that — interstitial spaces of an incoherent urban fabric — are seen through the eyes of the photographer as a new territory to conquer; the domain of abandoned dogs, bastards and mutts. "The distance between figures and external environment disappears" [4] for them.
Istanbul exists in an understandable dichotomy between its historical context and frontier territories
"Photography is premeditated," says Paola De Pietri, a condition that she associates with "pre-seeing a casual component" during the realization process but which returns the sensation of "being projected into the place," a displacement corresponding to what the photographer experiences during the act of grasping a transitory moment.
[2] Roberta Valtorta, Laura Gasparini, eds:, Æmilia, Art&, Tavagnacco, 1996
[3] Gianni Celati quoting the words of Luigi Ghirri, Nunzia Palmieri, Gianni Celati. Due o tre cose che so di lui (e dei suoi film), in Nunzia Palmieri ed: Documenti imprevedibili come i sogni. Il cinema di Gianni Celati, Fandango Libri, Roma, 2011
[4] Gianni Celati, Sul cinema italiano del dopoguerra mezzo secolo dopo, in Nunzia Palmieri ed: Documenti imprevedibili come i sogni. Il cinema di Gianni Celati, Fandango Libri, Roma