The Ameriguns by Gabriele Galimberti - Pennsylvania 002.
The Ameriguns by Gabriele Galimberti - Pennsylvania 002.
Printed on Baryta Prestige II Canson 340g paper and certified by ARTtrust.
All prints are accompanied by a certificate containing the artist’s signature and the details of the print.
Available in two formats: 80x60cm and 140x105cm. Limited edition.
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For over two years, Gabriele Galimberti conducted a visual inquiry on gun culture in the United States, guided by a single obsession: translating this social phenomenon into images. Enshrined as a fundamental right, at the very heart of the Constitution, gun ownership is anchored in all aspects of the American life, sometimes blending into some of its most sacred values. The number of arms (400 million) in the country has, as a matter of fact, surpassed that of the population growth (338 million). Galimberti’s images bring this truth to light, revealing the unexpected sides of the America that loves weapons.
Through social media, the photographer met men, women, and families from whom he drew a series of portraits all made within their living environments, their privacy.
Digging deeper into this duality, the photographer presents us with methodical, broad and frontal shots of his subjects, giving to his images a dimension both artistic and documentary from which one can make an objective inventory. These photographs, taken following a precise protocole, are never candid as they articulate a rhythm exempt of any motion. All traces of naturalness have been carefully erased.
His photographs present as carefully curated portraits. The families wear a straightforward expression, one could say a victorious one, where neither despair nor fear can be read. Surrounded by their gun collections, Galimberti found geometry in these families' pride and contentment.
The composition of his images favors cleverly organized spaces, sometimes almost partitioned, where the mise-en-scène gives the whole a graphic effect. Within these settings, the weapons are laid down in rows, circles or in the shape of stars: always meticulously arranged, they blend into the delicate fabric of these intimate environments. In such compositions they look almost harmless, toylike. In these domestic spaces where they appear to be united, the weapons reveal the values and ideals of their owners. Without becoming too cinematic, the lighting setup—always artificial—increases the theatrical range of the image.
Full of restraint, these photographs keep themselves away from all sensualism: here, violence remains latent, since rifles and handguns represent less a symbol of armament, and more an evocation of the unspeakable existence of guns with their compressed potential for explosivity. Without ever sacrificing the aesthetic value of his images, Galimberti thus points out the discrepancies, the paradoxes. But also a sad devotion: that of the American way of life.
Stephen F. Wagner (66 years old) – State College, Pennsylvania
Until the age of 50, Stephen just wished. He dreamed, assessed, studied history and models. He’s been fascinated with guns since childhood. When he was 8, his grandfather put a revolver in his hand and explained the basics. Decades later, Stephen would use that same handgun to teach his own children to shoot. It was a Smith & Wesson, and today it still holds a place of honour in the collection he’s spent the last 15 years building, starting when he left his job as a FedEx delivery man to go to work part time in a gun shop and also as an NRA-certified shooting instructor. Since then, Stephen has collected about 70 firearms. He favours rare and antique pieces. “I’m fascinated by the idea of being a part of history through the guns I own,” he explains. Those that date from the Spanish-American War are among the most valuable, but he is particularly proud of his American-made firearms and his collection of pieces from the 1970s. “I keep on buying them. They’re a good investment and they’ll be a marvelous legacy to pass on to my children.”
Every one of his guns has been used at least once. However, as is true of any collection worthy of the name, the joy comes from ownership. “We Americans are very lucky. It’s wonderful to have a bond of this sort with our country.”
Gabriele Galimberti
Born in 1977 in Italy Lives and works in Italy Gabriele Galimberti studied photography at the Fonzadione Studio Marangoni. He ran a professional photography studio and a gallery in Florence before becoming a full-time photographer, doing both commissioned work for international magazines and newspapers (National Geographic, The Sunday Times, Geo…) and long-term personal documentary projects. The latter have been published by Random House and Abrams, to great acclaim. (Toy Stories, In Her Kitchen, My Couch Is Your Couch and The Heavens).
His work has been exhibited all around the world, notably at the Swiss festival Images Vevey, but also at the Rencontres de la photographie d’Arles (2015), at the Perpignan Visa pour l’image (2021) and at the London V&A.
Gabriele has won the World Press Photo 2021 in the “Portraits” category with his project THE AMERIGUNS.