Something Out of Nothing: The Photography of Guido Guidi
Louis Rogers
MACK
Available to pre-order - this title is due to ship in October
Since the 1970s, Guido Guidi has been making photographs of the world around him, venturing out – often not far – from his home amid the agricultural landscapes of north-eastern Italy. His mesmerising large-format images depict houses, barns, people, tools, mounds of rubble and dirty snow. These unmonumental subjects are pictured with care and precision. As well as admiration, they can provoke bafflement and consternation. They put pressure on the question of what photography is: of what it means to take pictures of the world.
In this essay, writer Louis Rogers looks at Guido Guidi’s work to consider what it has to tell us about the habit of photography. Following the progression of Guidi’s practice from the stark black-and-white pictures of his youth to the large-format studies of place for which he is best known, it examines how this deeply photographic work is shaped by a surprising relationship with painting. It pursues allusions to early Renaissance religious art to analyse in material terms how Guidi balances the real and the symbolic, the exact and the mysterious. Drawing on philosophy, psychoanalysis, and literature, Something Out of Nothing offers an introduction to a wholly distinctive artist and a compelling new perspective on photography as an art form and a part of life.
Paperback with flap
12.5 x 19.5 cm, 144 pages
October 2026
ISBN 978-1-917651-81-3
€17 £15 US$20 AU$35
Free local shipping on orders over $80
Express shipping available
Return within 14 working days for a refund
Have a question? Call us on +44 (0) 20 7442 2190 or email us at support@mackbooks.co.uk