Mario Cattaneo

The Photography of Mario Cattaneo

In the period between the end of the Second World War in 1945 and the economic resurgence of the 1960s, Italy experienced enormous social and political transformations. Italian photographers responded to this post-war era by creating images that examined the realities of everyday life. These images, although seen as neo-realist or humanist in the tenor of social documentary photography, actually contained a wider range of motivations and styles. 

Photojournalism thrived with the rapid growth of illustrated weekly magazines. At the same time, amateur photographic organizations sought to promote photography as a form of art. These photographers produced images of urban street life in the industrial cities of northern Italy. Southern Italy also  became a primary source for the camera. While the site of the greatest post-war economic problems, southern Italy was a place of national unity, where local customs persevered amid Italy’s rapid modernization.

Born at Milan on the twenty-eighth of January in 1916, Mario Cattaneo was a significant but little-known Italian photographer who found the world of photographic clubs to be a place for his artistry and a framework for discussion and debate. Within those clubs, Cattaneo studied the technical aspects of photography,the works of established international photographers, and the theoretical and aesthetic concepts of the medium. The influences of French photographers Robert Doisneau and Henri Cartier-Bresson can be seen in Cattaneo’s attention to lighting and photo compositions.

Cattaneo’s first photographs, the series of images known as “La Fera del Sinigaglia”, were taken at Milan’s traditional flea market in the commune of Sinigaglia. The images he captured included portraits, articles for sale, and moments of spontaneous human interactions, often between buyers and sellers. Started in 1950, Cattaneo’s “Alleys” series explored the vibrant, and sometimes violent, everyday life found in Naples’s alleyways and also captured the hidden beauty and human stories found among the city’s narrow passages. A collection of  these Naples images was later published in 1992 by Electra under the title “Vicoli”. 

After his return to Milan, Mario Cattaneo became interested in the leisure and entertainment of Milanese youth during the economic boom of the post-World War II era. His photographs were taken at amusement parks, dance halls, and Sunday excursions at the Idroscalo, a city park with artificial lake that offered boating and swimming events as well as open-air concerts, bars and nightclubs. The images of Cattaneo’s three series “Luna Park”, “Una Domenica all’Idroscalo (A Sunday at the Idroscalo)” and “Giovanni al Juke Box” present the hope and carefree spirit of the young Milanese generation in newly adopted social activities and imported fashions.

Cattaneo continued working in Milan from 1964 to 1977 during which time he created two more series: the 1964-1965 “Caravaggio” and the 1973-1977 “Pop Festival”. Alongside his social and cultural presentations of Italy, Cattaneo produced travel images shot during his explorations of diverse cultures, among which were several trips to India. 

In 1991, the Federazione Italiana Associazioni Fotografiche (FIAF), an Italian photography confederation that supported amateur groups, named Mario Cattaneo “Author of the Year” and dedicated a traveling exhibition to his work. He received awards and recognition in Italy and overseas, including first prize in the competition “Racconto e Reportage Fotografico (Storytelling and Photographic Reportage)” held in Fermo. In 1996, “La Fera del Sinigaglia”, with editing by W. Tucci Caselli, was published by the Fondazione E. Monti. 

Mario Cataneo died in 2004 on the last of his many journeys to India. Following a donation from his heirs in 2006, the Mario Cattaneo collection has been owned by the Fondazione Museo di Fotografia Contemporanea in the Italian commune of Cinisello Balsamo. The photographic collection comprises over one hundred-ninety thousand film negatives, slides, prints, and contact sheets. This extensive collection attests to Cattaneo’s work between 1950 and 2004 as well as his ability to capture the beauty inherent in humanity, even within the simplest single shot.

Notes: Images of the Mario Cattaneo Collection of the Fondazione Museo di Fotografia Contemporanea can be found online at: https://www.mufocosearch.org/autori/AUF-10090-0000020?pageCurrent=1#paginationTop

The Italian photographic website The Mammoth Reflex has a short article on the work of Mario Cattaneo with several images at: https://www.themammothreflex.com/grandi-fotografi/2020/07/14/mario-cattaneo-mostra-cielo-aperto-cinisello-balsamo/

Top Insert Image: Mario Cattaneo, “Osteria”, 1970, Gelatin Silver Print, Museo di Fotografia Contemporanea

Second Insert Image: Mario Cattaneo, “Giovanni”, Juke box Series, 1960-1962, Gelatin Silver Print, Museo di Fotografia Contemporanea

Third Insert Image: Mario Cattaneo, “Napoli”, 1954, Gelatin Silver Print, Museo di Fotografia Contemporanea

Bottom Insert Image: Mario Cattaneo, “Napoli”, 1954, Gelatin Silver Print, Museo di Fotografia Contemporanea 

John Horne Burns: “That City in the Middle of the Sea”

Photographers Unknown, That City in the Middle of the Sea

Hal walked around the Galleria. He stuck his hands into his pockets, swaggered a little, and tried to smile at everyone. Often his smiles were returned. But he didn’t follow them up. His was the disinterested smile of God the Father surveying the world after the sixth day. And Hal had never seen so many soldiers whose free time hung like a weight on their backs, as their packs had hung in combat. They sat at the outside tables of the bars and drank vermouth. They wore shoulder patches of three divisions. Their faces were seamy or gentle or questioning or settled or blank. No other people in the Galleria Umberto had so many nuances on their lips as the Americans Hal saw there.

After looking in all the shop windows and all the posters and traversing both sides of the X-shaped pavement that bisected the Galleria, Hal sat down at one of the tables. He knew that he was in the tiniest yet the greatest city of the world. But it hadn’t the fixed pattern of a small town. It was a commune of August, 1944, and its population changed every day. These people who came to the Galleria to stand and drink and shop and look and question were set apart from the rest of the modern world. They were outside the formula of mothers and wives and creeds. The Galleria Umberto was like that city in the middle of the sea that rises every hundred years to dry itself m the sun.

John Horne Burns, The Gallery, Excerpt: Third Portrait (Hal), 1948, Harper & Brothers, New York

Born at Andover, Massachusetts in October of 1916, John Horne Burns was an American writer who, in his short life, published three works of which the best known was the 1947 best-seller “The Gallery”, An author whose first publication was well-received by critics, Burns  and his work eventually became largely forgotten.

The eldest of seven children of an upper middle-class Irish Catholic family, John Horne Burns was educated at St. Augustine’s School by the Sisters of Norte Dame and later at the Phillips Academy where he studied music. At Harvard University, Burns studied and became fluent in French, German and Italian; he also wrote several fictional works, none of which were published. Burns graduated Phi Beta Kappa in 1937 with a Bachelor of Arts in English, magna cum laude. After his graduation, he became a teacher at the Loomis School, a private boarding and day preparatory school in Windsor, Connecticut.

Although opposed to America’s decision to enter World War II, Burns was drafted as a private into the United States Army in 1942. He attended the Adjutant General’s School in Washington D.C. and received a commission as Second Lieutenant. Sent overseas in 1943, Burns served as a military intelligence officer in the cities of Casablanca and Algiers. Later transferred to Italy, he spent a year and a half censoring mail sent by prisoners of war. Burns lived during this period of service near the Galleria Umberto I, a partially destroyed shopping arcade frequented by soldiers, prostitutes and beggars. This galleria would provide the setting for his first novel. Burns was discharged from military service in 1946, at which time he returned to his teaching position at Loomis School. 

A man of both isolationist tendencies and an intense competitive nature, John Burns completed his first novel “The Gallery” in 1946 while teaching at the Loomis School. Published in 1947, the novel is composed of nine portraits of local women and soldiers interspersed with eight recollections narrated by an anonymous American soldier. Issues raised in the novel include economic and social inequities, homosexual experiences in the military, the impact of the Allied occupation on the population of Naples, and the assertion of individuality within the war effort. “The Gallery”, an unconventionally structured literary work, received high praise from critics and such writers as Ernest Hemingway, Joseph Heller, Edmund Wilson, and Gore Vidal.  

Burns became a man sought for his views on literature and would occasionally write a complimentary review. However, he became well-known for his strong, often caustic, reviews of both his peers and more established writers including such prominent men as Thomas Wolfe, Somerset Maugham, and James Michener. In 1949, Burns published his second novel, the satirical “Lucifer with a Book” that was based on his life experiences at the Loomis boarding school. He expected better reviews than those received by his first novel; however, the critical response to this work was dismal. 

Disheartened by the reviews, John Burns returned in 1950 to Italy where, designated a famous author by the local paper, he settled in Florence’s Hotel Excelsior, a famous expatriate gathering place along the Arno River. Burns wrote and published his third novel, the 1952 “A Cry of Children”. In this novel, he told the story of a man with a brilliant career as a concert pianist who is led by his mistress into a bohemian world of vice and depravity, only to be redeemed later by the very things he left behind. Although Burns’s third work also received uniformly negative reviews, some critics still thought that Burns was a writer of future distinction.

While working on a fourth novel, Burns supported himself by writing an article on the city of Florence for the American travel magazine “Holiday”. He eventually gained a reputation in Florence as a person who drank to excess and complained of rivals, critics and both friends and enemies. At the end of July in 1953, the publishing firm Harper & Brothers rejected Burns’s fourth book “The Stranger’s Guise”. In August while sailing with his Italian boyfriend just south off the port city of Livorno, Burns had a seizure. Five days later on the eleventh of August, he was dead of a cerebral hemorrhage at the age of thirty-six. 

Tom Burns, John’s younger brother, hired a well-connected American lawyer in Rome to investigate Burns’s death; however, nothing suspicious was found. Originally interred in Italy, John Burns’s body was later exhumed by his family and buried at Holyhood Cemetery in Brookline, Massachusetts. His short stories, poems, articles, photographs, and novels, including his final unpublished “The Stranger’s Guise”, are housed in the collections of the Boston University.

Notes: Writer Jerry Portwood has an interview with essayist David Margolick, author of “Dreadful”, a biography on the life of John Horne Burns, at the online July issue of Out magazine: https://www.out.com/entertainment/art-books/2013/07/18/john-horne-burns-gay-icon-david-margolick-gallery-military

The Lambda Literary also has a 2013 interview with author David Margolick that covers  John Burns’s life and legacy: https://lambdaliterary.org/2013/07/david-margolick-john-horne-burns-and-the-dreadful-life/

A dissertation by Mark Travis Bassett entitled “John Horne Burns: Toward a Critical Biography” can be read as a free PDF download from MOspace, an online thesis extension of the University of Missouri: https://mospace.umsystem.edu/xmlui/handle/10355/35623

An online version of John Horne Burns’s 1948 “The Gallery” can be read for free at the Internet Archive site located at: https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.168101/page/n5/mode/2up

For those interested, author David Margolick’s 2014 biography on John Burns, “Dreadful”, was published by Other Press and is available as both an ebook and paperback through various retailers.