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The

Artist

Lives and Works in
Fabriano

Giulia Gatti was born in Fabriano in 1995. A lifelong dancer, she moved to Rome, where she collaborated with several dance companies. In 2017 she began her research in photography, studying for a year at the New Institute of Design (NID) in Perugia, where she graduated. In 2019 she won the first prize Portfolio sul Po of the FIAF national circuit Portfolio Italia 2019. She currently continues her journey through South America — between Peru, Bolivia, Argentina, Patagonia, and Mexico — dedicating herself to projects that combine dance, photography, and writing. In 2020 her project “Su mia madre tira vento” received the Marco Pesaresi Award for Contemporary Photography.

Projects
2026

Corazonada

This body of work originated in Tehuantepec’s isthmus in Mexico, a land that historically has always been the subject of numerous tales and depictions- portrayals from travelers, academics and artists. The majority of these works was focused on the women that inhabit this region, most of it it is undeniably powerful, elegant and independent. More that continuing pursuing this kind of narration, these months in Mexico brought me to deal with a simple latent - veiled - abeyant desire, which evidently is the need to not being represented by a patriarchal gaze. This project for me might just be a small attempt to destructure the ISTMENO female imaginary which has always been surrounded by a lot of pretension and presumptions. These women’s stories travel among a contemporaneity that is beginning to make noise, people want to overturn the prejudices and archetypes built over time, by building new sets of rules, touching the feminine scope through a symbology that is linked to power, to erotism, mystery and nostalgia. This series is above all my personal experiment to sabotage- demolish - undermine all of the milestones that our society expects women to achieve, to play with them, to provoke and disrupt the fertile ground of tradition.
Giulia Gatti
was nominated by
CAMERA Centro Italiano per la Fotografia
in
2026
Show all projects
Each year every member of the FUTURES European Photography Platform nominates a set of artists and projects to become part of the FUTURES network.

At a time in history when images are overproduced and overconsumed, these artists share the ability to slow down the gaze, construct complex narratives, and redefine the relationship between document and imagination.

Filippo Barbero's practice is part of a tradition of investigating subjectivity using photography as a device for knowledge. His attention to detail in bodies and the environment highlights a constant emotional tension where the everyday becomes political and the smallest gesture acquires collective resonance. 

Davide Degano offers a radical reflection on the representation of Italian identity: his photographs deconstruct the environmental, social, and cultural heritage—as well as the colonial legacy—and, through the filter of the younger generations, convey the complexity of the evolution of the boot-shaped country.

Giulia Gatti's work explores the theme of femininity in the communities inhabiting the Isthmus of Tehuantepec in Mexico, a place known through stereotypical depictions in travel literature from the last century. The narrative of everyday life as a symbolic experience shows an alliance between human and non-human bodies, spaces, and customs, thus deconstructing the invention of tradition.

Sofia Gastaldo's sociological view of customs and traditions in urban centers goes beyond the logic of traditional documentary, transforming the image into a space for collaboration and conscious staging. Her subjects emerge from the darkness, while the strong visual impact of color contrasts reveals the sculptural character of bodies and objects in the definition of forms. 

Federica Sasso's visual research addresses a narrative dimension that intertwines documentary photography with algorithmic recognition programs, video, and installation. Her investigation of social dynamics in the technological age enhances the quality of photography as a tool for research, critical revelation, and public activation. 

Together, these artists construct a landscape in which photography is no longer just representation, but process, research, relationship, and responsibility. Their selection does not respond to generational or geographical criteria, but to a common tension towards linguistic innovation and ethical commitment.

List of curators:

Giangavino Pazzola – Curator of contemporary and research programs at CAMERA

François Hebel – Director at CAMERA

Nominators:

Daniele De Luigi – curator Fondazione AGO Modena

Giuseppe Oliverio – director PHMuseum Bologna

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