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    Categories: People

In Photos: The 1960s American Dream

Fashion students, flashing signage and queuing punters make up peripatetic Italian photographer Mario Carnicelli’s take on the US. This selection of photos represents the 1960s American dream.

Check them out for more information and start to see our world through photos!

Fashion students, New York, 1966

In 1966, budding Italian photographer Mario Carnicelli won a scholarship to photograph the United States. A new publication documents his discoveries, as he traveled across the country, taking in cities from Chicago and Buffalo to San Francisco, and New York.

Airport payphones, Chicago, 1966

Carnicelli was as fascinated by the country’s diversity, individuality and pursuit of happiness …

Two girls in a car, Washington DC, 1967

… as he was by the loneliness and rootlessness he observed in its people

South Pacific Restaurant, Chicago, 1966

Rediscovered after 50 years, this is the first time this body of photographic work has been published

Men Wanted shopfront, Chicago, 1966

The details that caught the Italian photographer’s eye – from shopfront signage to hairdos habits – belie the outsider’s perspective with which he approached his subject

Schoolboy, New York, 1966

American Voyage sees a European artist discovering what comprised daily life across the pond in the 60s

Queue at job center, Chicago, 1966

Throughout his career, Carnicelli documented political events, social movements, and public gatherings

Lincoln Memorial, Washington, 1967

People remained at the core of Carnicelli’s work, as he went on to work for national newspapers and magazines

Trade union workers, Detroit, 1966

Carnicelli’s humanist approach was influenced by photographers including Lewis Hine and the celebrated Farm Security Administration photography programme, which documented rural life and poverty in the 1930s and 1940s

 

A.C.:
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