Italy Black & white photo
Ghitta Carell was the professional name of Ghitta Klein, a naturalized Italian photographer, born in Hungary, who came to prominence between 1930 and 1950. Noted for her portraiture, she was a favored photographer among the aristocracy and despite her Jewish heritage she helped build the imagery used in Fascist propaganda. After the fall of Mussolini, she remained in Italy, though her field of influence was greatly diminished. At the end of the 1960s, she immigrated to Israel, where she died in obscurity. Her archives, preserved by the 3M Foundation, have widely toured throughout Europe and a revival of interest in evaluating her skill as a technician has developed in the 21st century.
Angela Lo Priore is an Italian portrait photographer living and working in Rome and Milan.
Women are one of the main subjects of Angela's photographs, but scenic design plays an important role here, helping to create surrealistic subjects.
Having experimented with different forms of photography in architecture, advertising and fashion, Angela Lo Priore has found her true artistic expression in portraiture. The portraits of stars and divas of Italian and world cinema are her most famous works. The result of this work is the book "One Hundred Portraits", a gallery of one hundred stunning photographic portraits of famous actors, actresses and directors.
Baron Wilhelm Ivan Friederich August von Gloeden, commonly known as Baron von Gloeden, was a German photographer who lived and worked in Italy. One of the greatest masters of male nudity, a precursor of homosexual photography and a forerunner of performance art.
Wilhelm von Gloeden is mainly known for his pastoral photographs of nude Sicilian boys, which usually feature props such as wreaths or amphorae, suggestive of ancient Greece or Italy. From a contemporary perspective, his work is commendable for its controlled use of lighting, as well as the often elegant poses of his models. His innovations include the use of photofilters and special cosmetics (a mixture of milk, olive oil and glycerine) to mask skin imperfections.