Description
"Mod, punk, b-boy, graffiti artists, tribes; skinheads, rock roots."
Rome: the center and the suburbs, lounges and highways, tattoo studios and recording rooms. This is the background of photographer Paolo Cenciarelli who, between 1998 and 2015, told the story of an epochal change, the beginning of the Roman Underground in a new millennium made of music, concerts, tattoos and an ever-present counterculture underworld.
What is counterculture? “It’s what will become fashion after ten years”, someone once said. This is the spirit that accompanies Vangelo, the most exhaustive and irreverent collection of photographs that take as their protagonist the eternal city, holy and sinful, always the same and always different, populated by the noble poor, the rich drug dealers, decadent scenarios and abandoned treasures, suburbs without name and ruins of an old and never forgotten opulence.
Just from its title, it’s clear that Vangelo is provocative photographic collection, deliberately invoking the “sacred part” of everyday Rome. Everything you see has happened under the windows of the Church, between Popes and conspirators, priests and nuns, buses of the faithful and tattooed rebels, rosaries, prayers and vandals with crosses on their necks.
Paolo Cenciarelli
Paolo Cenciarelli, born in ‘84, was born and raised in Rome. After graduating, he chose photography as his medium of communicating. Largely influenced by the underground, his approach to the form becomes immediately recognizable and therefore required for commissioned editorials and commercials, thus allowing the author to very quickly join agencies, first in Italy and then worldwide.
Paolo has published for major international and Italian magazines, produced advertising campaigns for multinational companies and continued to exhibit his personal research in group, solo and festival exhibitions. His research is focused on the underground, its reality, its roots and its territorial development.
Printed in Italy




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