old masters

THE NEW HUMANITY…CHRISTY LEE ROGERS CREATES COVER IMAGE FOR THE 2021 LAVAZZA CALENDAR

SEE THE FULL PROJECT HERE 2021 LAVAZZA CALENDAR

In a changing scenario in which barriers and distancing between individuals, communities and nations become necessary, Lavazza is trying to build bridges between people, drawing them closer through the universal language of art, the one capable of speaking to the heart of us all. Its aim is to show human beings’ extraordinary resilience and generate feelings of hope that will make it possible to build a “New Humanity”. 

In The New Humanity 2021 calendar, 13 masters of photography present a new vision of humanity that reflects their personal viewpoints and styles. They are David LaChapelle, Simone Bramante, Martin Schoeller, Ami Vitale, Christy Lee Rogers, Steve McCurry, Joey L., Carolyn Drake, Denis Rouvre, Eugenio Recuenco, Charlie Davoli, Martha Cooper and TOILETPAPER.

The New Humanity 2021 magazine also has six cultural “ambassadors” called on to explore and amplify the multiple meanings of New Humanity and stimulate even deeper reflection on the process of restarting and reopening, starting from their own personal experience and sensibility. They are architect Carlo Ratti, designer Stella Jean, writer Alessandro Baricco, actress Kiera Chaplin, singer- songwriter Patti Smith, and Save the Children International CEO Inger Ashing.

“Everyday people can be transformed into angelic creatures with the slightest change of perspective, by using tools in new ways and allowing our mistakes to guide us toward new truths”. CLR

COLNAGHI FOUNDATION AND ART HISTORIAN ISABELLE KNET INTERVIEW CHRISTY LEE ROGERS

In an interview of contemporary photographer Christy Lee Rogers by the Colnaghi Foundation, a non-profit London organisation with the purpose of promoting Old Masters, art historian Isabelle Kent compares Christy's works to Rubens.

Isabelle, who lectures at the Victoria and Albert Museum and was a Curatorial Assistant at the Wallace Collection, said:

"Christy is best known for her pioneering use of water and pools in her photography... Christy's art plays with themes of strength and vulnerability, loss and beauty... creating ethereal and otherworldly images full of color and billowing fabrics. They have often been compared to Baroque paintings, in particular the likes of Caravaggio and I certainly think her multi-figure works, with all of their movement, really remind me of Rubens."

See the full interview here