Romano Cagnoni (Pietrasanta, Italy, 9 November 1935 – 30 January 2018)[1] was an Italian photographer who spent most of his professional life based in London.
Biography
Cagnoni used to photograph sculptures in the small town of Pietrasanta, Tuscany, which is famous for its sculpture studios. In 1958, he moved to London, UK, where he lived for 30 years. Here, he started working as a freelance photographer contributing to different European magazines. He worked with Simon Guttmann who run the London office of the Report photo agency.
In 1968 he won the Overseas Press Club Award,[4] for his Nigerian Civil War reportage published in Life, the German Art Directors' Club bronze medal for documenting with a large format camera the destruction from the war in the former Yugoslavia, and many Italian prizes.[citation needed] In the late 1980s, he returned to live in Pietrasanta in Italy, from where he travels worldwide for his work.
Cagnoni held 43 solo exhibitions, 43 group shows and retrospectives worldwide. His exhibition at Palazzo dell'Arengario in Milan, bore the title "Chiaroscuro", which, beyond the literal meaning, hints to "humour and darkness": these photographs show the darkness of war and sometimes the humour of everyday life. Cagnoni felt that these opposites are the essence of his work.