Photographs showing mob killings, grieving families and funerals.
Photographs showing mob killings, grieving families and funerals. | Libri antichi e moderni | [Mafia - Sicily]. Scafidi, Nicola.
Photographs showing mob killings, grieving families and funerals.
Photographs showing mob killings, grieving families and funerals. | Libri antichi e moderni | [Mafia - Sicily]. Scafidi, Nicola.
Metodi di Pagamento
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- Carta di Credito
- Bonifico Bancario
- Pubblica amministrazione
- Carta del Docente
Dettagli
- Autore
- [Mafia - Sicily]. Scafidi, Nicola.
- Editori
- Palermo, ca. 1961-1966.
- Soggetto
- History, Law, Politics
Descrizione
5 loose silver gelatin photographic prints on baryta paper, ca. 24 x 30 cm, all but one with manuscript captions on the reverse. A small collection of disturbingly gruesome photographs of mob killings in the 1960s by one of Sicily's greatest photo-journalists as printed from his studio, which shows how the Sicilian mafia was thoroughly and chillingly enmeshed in Sicilian society. - Five loose silver gelatin photographic prints, showing mob killings, funerals and families by Nicola Scafidi (1925-2004), Sicily's most important mafia photographer of his time. The Palermo-based photographer Scafidi spent much of his career making striking yet chilling pictures of mob killings, as almost half of the negatives in his archives were shots of the dark world of the Sicilian mafia. - On the back of four of the five photographs is a short caption, stating very briefly what is shown (and sometimes when it happened). All photographs bear the stamp of Scafidi's photographic studio on the back. All but the photograph of Paolino Riccobono bear the same address: "Via [Marino] Stabile no. 171". The address on the photograph of Paolino reads "Via M[arino] Stabile n. 166". Scafidi moved his studio to no. 166 in 1956, but since this photograph was made in 1961, the photograph must have been printed later. We do not know when Scafidi moved to no. 171, but it was very likely also in the 1960s, as the latest dated photographs bears the date 1966, and another shows a 1960 killing. He moved to no. 163 in the same street in 1988, but the present photographs all appear to have been printed in the 1960s. - In very good condition. - Cf. Lee Hockstader, "Sicilian Mafia Licking its Wounds", in: The Washington Post, 21 April 1998; Jane Schneider & Peter T. Schneider, Reversible Destiny: Mafia, Antimafia and the Struggle for Palermo (2003), pp. 103f.