Ashby and Abruzzo

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BSR Members and Friends are warmly invited to Past, Present and Future in Abruzzo Photographic exhibition in collaboration with Ad.Venture with contributions by Christopher Smith, Valerie Scott Andrew Hopkins & Ed Bispham Thursday, 28 th June 2012 at 6.00 p.m. at the British Academy, 10–11 Carlton House Terrace, London, SW1Y 5AH Members are requested to RSVP in case of acceptance, to [email protected] or 020 7969 5247

Transcript of Ashby and Abruzzo

Page 1: Ashby and Abruzzo

BSR Members and Friends are warmly invited to

Past, Present and Future in Abruzzo Photographic exhibition

in collaboration with Ad.Venture

with contributions by

Christopher Smith, Valerie Scott Andrew Hopkins & Ed Bispham

Thursday, 28th June 2012 at 6.00 p.m.

at the British Academy, 10–11 Carlton House Terrace, London, SW1Y 5AH

Members are requested to RSVP in case of acceptance,

to [email protected] or 020 7969 5247

Page 2: Ashby and Abruzzo

On 31 May 2011, The British School at Rome launched the Ashby e l’Abruzzo exhibition. This project attracted national attention, not only due to the BSR’s reputation in Italy, but perhaps more poignantly, because of the tragic 2009 earthquake that devastated l’Aquila, capital of the Abruzzo region. The exhibition of new digital prints opened in L’Aquila on 11 June 2011 and is touring Abruzzo until the end September 2012, returning to its permanent home in L’Aquila - a gift from the BSR to the city. The amount of national press coverage during the tour was unexpected and unprecedented, and over 25,000 visited the exhibition. The catalogue, edited by Vienna Tordone, Thomas Ashby: Viaggi in Abruzzo /Travels in Abruzzo 1901/1923, is published by SilvanaEditoriale. The BSR Photographic Archive includes the collection of over 8,000 photographs taken by Thomas Ashby, the first student and third Director of the BSR. These include images taken on his six visits to the Abruzzo region between 1901 and 1923, documenting not only archaeological sites, but also many festivals and processions in villages throughout Abruzzo. The remarkable photographs taken in markets and piazzas poignantly illustrate the early 20th Century rural Italians’ reaction to the rather oddly-dressed English photographer - it was perhaps the first camera they had ever seen. This remarkable project, in collaboration with Ad.Venture srl and entirely funded by Italian institutions and companies, is a striking example of the collaboration between the BSR and the Italian community. It also vividly and poignantly demonstrates the importance of viewing the contemporary through the lens of history – Thomas Ashby’s collection documents for eternity a region and a reality that is forever lost.

See www.bsr.ac.uk/news/london/ashby-and-the-abruzzo for more information.