No Place Like Home. Italian Photography Since The 1980s at Schauwerk Sindelfingen

  • Opens
    1 Feb 2026
  • Ends
    26 Jul 2026
  • Link
  • Location Sindelfingen, Germany

No Place Like Home is the first major retrospective exhibition to explore the evolution of Italian photography since the 1980s, showcasing how the country, emerging from the postwar economic boom, developed its own photographic visual language.

Overview

Some 300 works show Italy as seen through the eyes of about forty photographers. The spectrum of works on display includes portraits, conceptual and serial works, socially, politically, and societally situated photographs, and landscape photographs, which occupy a special place in Italian art. The exhibition addresses topics such as migration and the country’s imperialist past. Urban and rural spaces appear as places of both personal memory and collective identity. Photographs of people offer a diverse panorama: a confused elderly man wearing a skirt and diving goggles, teenage skateboarders, two lovers in an intimate embrace, a child holding a toy gun.

In addition to internationally renowned photographers of the 1980s, such as Guido Guidi, Gabriele Basilico, and Luigi Ghirri, the exhibition, curated by Ralph Goertz, also focuses on the artistically significant phase of the 1990s and early 2000s, as well as on a younger generation that has provided important new impetus over the past two decades.

Many artists engage with the medium of photography itself. They do so in a variety of ways: sometimes traditionally and at other times progressively—but always touching and far removed from the clichés of “La dolce vita” and “bella Italia.”

Among the exhibiting artists are Giulia Agostini, Marina Ballo Charmet, Fabio Barile, Gabriele Basilico, Michele Borzoni, Andrea Botto, Michele Buda, Michele Cera, Federico Clavarino, Tomaso Clavarino, Carmen Colombo, Mario Cresci, Paola De Pietri, Davide Degano, Paola Di Bello, Matteo Di Giovanni, Simone Donati, Alessandra Dragoni, Cesare Fabbri, Marcello Galvani, Luigi Ghirri, William Guerrieri, Guido Guidi, Giulia Iacolutti, Francesca Iovene, Armin Linke, Nicola Lo Calzo, Sara Lorusso, Rachele Maistrello, Allegra Martin, Marco Marzocchi, Maurizio Montagna, Francesco Neri, Walter Niedermayr, Luca Nostri, Michela Palermo, Sara Palmieri, Iacopo Pasqui, Piero Percoco, and Alessandro Ruzzier.