ENTRY DESCRIPTION
analogic photo took by a polaroid sx-70 camera and the-impossible-ptoject b/w instant film (black frame special edition).
this is a tube station entrance (concadoro, rome, italy), summer, lunch time to get highest contrast between light and shadow.
as is. due to the nature of the instant film there is no postproduction of course.
AUTHOR
Patrizio Cipollini started shooting in 1975 with a borrowed camera and soon learned how to develop B&W films and print photos, both for himself and for other amateur photographers. He bought his first Olympus OM1 camera in 1977. Patrizio shoot, developed, printed and sold his first chronicle/reportage photo to IL TEMPO newspaper in the late 70. Half day working to sell a photo: it was the "analogic B/W era". Influenced by Fontana's minimalist and saturated shoots, he started using Kodak Ektachrome 64 slides during the 80s: his ghaphic and colorful compositions earned him several amateur prizes and honorable mentions. Patrizio started his digital-era late, around 2005; at the end of the decade he focused on and experimented the potential of low-resolution cellphone cameras, much before the latest smartphones built-in photo manipulation apps. In 2011 he went back to analogic media, falling in love with old polaroids - both instant (peel-off) and integral (SX-70) processes, and he is now an active member of Polaroiders community (www.polaroiders.it). In 2013 he started workshops on Polaroid history, cameras, shooting and some image manipulation and lifting. Several Patrizio's photos have been published by IL MANIFESTO newspaper. Since November 2013 a selection of Patrizio's Polaroid Film Lifting have been available at Carlo Gallerati Gallery (Rome, Italy). Patrizio has also been cited as one of the emerging photographers in the volume written by Enzo Carli, "Quella porta sullo sguardo. Viaggio breve nella fotografia artistica italiana" (Ideas, 2014). Patrizio is shooting digital only as a still photographer in movies productions actually.
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