When Food Becomes Art: The Photography of Alessandro Guerani

Published by Wednesday, April 4, 2012 Permalink 0

by Jonell Galloway

This article was published earlier. We’re reprinting it to complement Guerani’s  food photography exhibit, to be published today

The visual importance of food

I spend a lot of my life looking at food.

I look at the fruit and vegetables so beautifully and carefully stacked in the market stalls, forming masses of color and myriads of shapes. I look at the “masterpieces” of the great chefs who take so much care to artfully arrange the food on the plates so that it is as visually tempting as it is appetizing.

Photo courtesy of Alessandro Guerani.

 

Without much success, I try my hand at photographing these beauties for my MarketDay and restaurant posts, but I never get it right. And when I develop recipes, I make the most embarrassingly amateur photos of what actually does taste good in the mouth, despite the lifeless-looking photo with its hit-or-miss compositions.

My point is that food photography is not as easy as it might seem. Like any photography or art form, you need the right lighting, composition and contrasts of colors. And above all, you need talent and a good, trained eye.

In my case, I often make everyone at the table wait to start eating while I try and get it just right, because I simply lack the true artistic talent and technical skills that it requires. That might partially be explained by the fact that I ran away from the classroom at the Cordon Bleu every time we had to arrange flowers, set tables, and do presentations, so what should I expect?

Photo courtesy of Alessandro Guerani.

 

I look at food blogs and food photography, and no matter how much I look, my favorite photographer never seems to change. I think the secret of Alessandro Guerani’s success as a food photographer is that he is also a cook. He develops recipes and thinks with his taste buds, just like me, but he has the added gift of being capable of capturing visual beauty and essence, in the manner of the Flemish and Italian masters.

Food is not, after all, only a story of taste

Food is not, after all, only a story of taste. It is about texture and how it feels in your mouth. It is about whether it looks appetizing, how it is presented on the plate. It is about the smells coming from the kitchen, gently seducing you to the table, and the taste you have while it’s in your mouth and the aftertaste that lingers. It can even be about sound, for example, when the alcohol goes up in flames as they flambé your crêpes Suzette.

The enjoyment of food is a coming together of all the senses, and when all the senses are happy and content, you come away from the table satisfied.

About the photographer, Alessandro Guerani

Alessandro Guerani was born in Bologna, Italy, in 1969, where he still lives. He started using cameras at the age of twenty while studying Medieval and Renaissance art history.

After college, Alessandro worked as an intern in a professional photography studio, and that’s where it all seems to have come together. Afterward, it was clear to him that food and still life photography were his calling.

But the underlying secret of Alessandro’s success is not as simple as that. He obviously has an exceptional visual sense and the technical skills required to turn this into art, but he also loves good food, especially traditional Italian cuisine, with its multitude of flavors and combinations. As a result, he knows how to make all the senses come alive in a seemingly simple photograph.

Photo courtesy of Alessandro Guerani.

 

Guerani is a master of lighting, and is meticulous about every visual detail. His photos are full of color and contrast, making them rich and full of depth. They sometimes verge on the Medieval, and at other times, on the Renaissance or the Baroque. At still other times, they are spartan and ultra-contemporary, but they are always beautiful. And they always make my mouth water and my eye twinkle.

But above all, they are more than food photography. They are art. Slide-showing through his photos on my large-screen iMac truly makes feel like I’m walking through an art gallery. In the photos above, the vegetables, carrots and artichokes are worthy of a Chardin; the silver filigree platter with apricots is as rich in tone, texture and contrast as the great Italian Renaissance painters; the intermingling of the blue and white tones in the third photograph, so beautifully composed, bring back memories of blue Delft, French faience, and luxurious Italian country linen tablecloths. The knife handle is pointed toward the viewer, inviting the viewer to pick it up and take a taste.

True art is when all the criteria come together in a perfect balance. Guerani not only captures the image of the object he is photographing. He understands the very essence of its beauty and calls on every sense, thus making it much more than a simple picture on your run-of-the-mill food blog.

You can see more of Alessandro’s photos, as well as his recipes, on FotoGrafia, and a Baroque-like photo of pomegranates in What is Mindful Eating?

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Simon Says: Daily Food Quote, April 3, 2012

Published by Tuesday, April 3, 2012 Permalink 0

Simon Says: Daily Food Quote, April 3, 2012

by Simón de Swaan

I grow my own tomatoes every summer for the same reason I diet: it makes me feel righteous!–Bert Greene

Bert Greene was a cookbook author and food columnist. His food column for the New York Daily News ran from 1979 until his death in 1988, and was eventually syndicated.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Simon Says: Daily Food Quote, April 2, 2012

Published by Monday, April 2, 2012 Permalink 0

by Simón de Swaan

 

As he chops, cuts, slices, trims, shapes, or threads through the string, a butcher is as good a sight to watch as a dancer or a mime.–Colette

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

81 Years Of Style: French Writer Colette’s Never Ending Influence On Fashion was the surname of the French novelist and performer Sidonie-Gabrielle Colette. She is best known for her novel Gigi, upon which Lerner and Loewe based the stage and film musical comedies of the same title.

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Switzerland: A Documentary Slide Show of the 1st Salon du Chocolat in Zurich

Published by Sunday, April 1, 2012 Permalink 0

Switzerland: A Documentary Slide Show of the 1st Salon du Chocolat in Zurich

by Jonell Galloway

Here’s a quick, unfiltered overview of the photos I took at the first Salon du Chocolat Zurich.

These are here to help you get an idea of what was on offer at the show. They are not professional photos, yet they are mine. If you want to use them commercially or copy them, please be so kind as to contact me beforehand by clicking on the blue Contact Us button at the top right of our home page.

I’ll be adding more tonight or tomorrow morning, so stay in touch!

 

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Food Art: Black and White Wednesday, a food photography exhibit by Rosa Mayland

Published by Friday, March 30, 2012 Permalink 0

Rosa Mayland ponders on the meaning and significance of food in everyday life in her column Rosa’s Musings. She has the advantage of growing up in an incredibly multicultural environment and speaking many languages. She runs the site Rosa’s Yummy Yums. “Terroir with TLC” is the word chez Rosa — quality ingredients, regional and seasonal produce, made with tender loving care — and this is reflected in the recipes she creates.

Rosa recently started photographing in black and white and we find them delightful. This is her first one-woman show of B&W food photography.

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Simon Says: Daily Food Quote, March 30, 2012

Published by Friday, March 30, 2012 Permalink 0

by Simón de Swaan

Bubbles are the gracenotes of champagne.–Anonymous

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Simple Sustenance: Roasted Cauliflower with Kalamata Olives and Lemon-Parsley Gremolata

Published by Thursday, March 29, 2012 Permalink 0

Mediterranean Flair: Roasted Cauliflower with Kalamata Olives and Lemon-Parsley Gremolata

by Renu Chhabra

 

Food is our common ground, a universal experience.– James Beard

 

Spring is in the air, a season for new growth and rejuvenation. Everywhere we look, nature is awakening from its long winter rest. With flowers blooming and landscape covered with a blanket of green, there is a sense of new life welcoming the ever-inspiring spring, signifying a fresh start. And what better way to celebrate this beautiful time than to cook up something delicious with fresh ingredients and clean flavors just like the season itself.

Growing up I was always intrigued by cauliflower, a vegetable that came in a beautiful green leafy package. Peel off the leaves, and a white head of tiny trees clustered together greeted me. It was like removing gift wrap to find a lovely present inside. And who doesn’t like presents? I guess, that is why I have always loved this vegetable — a beautifully packaged gift from Mother Nature.

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Simon Says: Daily Food Quote, March 27, 2011

Published by Tuesday, March 27, 2012 Permalink 0

by Simón de Swaan

Hunger is felt by a slave and hunger is felt by a king.–Ghanaian proverb

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Sauce for Thought: Sweet Flower of Dreams

Published by Monday, March 26, 2012 Permalink 0

 

by Alice DeLuca

A little prehistoric flower has been grown, re-created really, from 32,000 year-old seeds found in the ancient den of an artic ground squirrel. The photo of the little white flower in the New York Times [i] brought a rush of excitement and a feeling of kinship with the scientists who sought to cover those seeds with earth and add water, to cup their hands and breathe warm air over the planting, revealing the sprouts last seen by the tiny ground squirrel so long ago. I have the same feeling when reading an antique recipe that might bring back the flavors of the ancestors. Can we breathe life in to an antique delicacy and resurrect a better flavor? Why did people add rose geraniums to their jelly, infuse herring pie[ii] with grains de paradis[iii], or even stir and stir to create cornstarch pudding for that matter? Perhaps they knew a marvelous flavor-way or texture that has been lost to us, overtaken by food fads and conveniences of the present day?

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Simon Says: Daily Food Quote, March 26, 2012

Published by Monday, March 26, 2012 Permalink 0

by Simón de Swaan

A good meal ought to begin with hunger.–French proverb

 

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