Exhibition | The Rainbow Over Florence
The exhibition is open to visitors until Sunday, February 2nd, from Tuesday to Friday, from 2.00 pm to 7.00 pm; on Saturdays and Sundays, from 10.00 am to 7.00 pm.
It will be closed on December 25th, 26th, and 31st, as well as on January 1st.
Opening | Thursday, December 5, at 6.30 pm at B11
The opening of The Rainbow Over Florence, a solo photography exhibition by Piero Percoco, will take place on Thursday, December 5, at 6.30 pm. Curated by C41, the exhibition will be hosted in the spaces of Building 11.
One could start from the observation of our surroundings to stimulate curiosity and realize that we actually do not know much about the world, in the simplicity of everyday life, despite the ever-present technological advances that lead us to believe we know everything.
We think we know the sky, for example, because, since childhood, we have been taught about the solar system, galaxies, black holes, astronauts. We know the Milky Way exists but most of us have never seen it. So, clouds too have definite names, are the subject of study and observation, have been classified by scientists, and nature has its own definite rules while being extremely free and constantly adapting in response to changes imposed by human beings.
The Rainbow Over Florence, a solo exhibition by photographer Piero Percoco, is an exploration of the socio- natural landscape that characterizes his research, an invitation to question what we think we know and to find wonder in the ordinary, in the most familiar landscape as in the most colorful and extraordinary sky.
Clouds and cryptic messages, cosmic cobwebs, nature and the human being: a mash-up in which the ordinary and the extraordinary merge and are mirrored in the metaphor of the rainbow, an underestimated phenomenon, both
mundane and mystical.
Piero Percoco
Piero Percoco (Bari, 1987) is a photographer and the author of “Prism Interiors”, published in 2018 by Skinnerboox, fully designed and edited by Jason Fulford, and “The Rainbow Is Underestimated”, a visual coming-of-age novel collecting more than 100 of his most iconic photographs.
His work has been exhibited in Italian and international galleries and festivals, such as Duesseldorf Photo Weekend, SP4 Gallery Treviso, Leica Store Milan, and has been published in “The New Yorker”, “Guggenheim Venice”, “New York Times”, “Rolling Stones” and “The British Journal of Photography” among others.