Legendary photojournalist Steve McCurry, who counts the famous Afghan Girl portrait as only one of his many amazing photos, is opening a retrospective exhibit in Italy called “Steve McCurry: Oltre Lo Sguardo” that will feature 150 photos taken throughout the 30 years of his illustrious career. The photos, taken among people of various cultures around the world, emphasize his unparalleled ability to capture the human soul through a lens.
“For me a portrait is about connection, somehow you connect with a person, visually or emotionally,” McCurry told designboom. “I’ve often believed that a person’s life stories are kind of written on their face. It’s magical, it’s mystical the way you can connect to a person, it’s hard to describe. You know it when you see it.”
The exhibit will be held in the beautiful Villa Reale di Monza in Italy, but it will run through April 6th, 2105, so if you’re dying to see his photos (as you should be), you can still make plans.
An elderly man of the Rabari tribe, Rajasthan, India, 2010
Shadow play, Preah Khan, Angkor, Cambodia, 1999
Children from the Kara tribe look through windows, Omo Valley, Ethiopia, 2013
Workers on a steam locomotive, India, 1983
Mumbai, India
India
Sanaa, Yemen
Rajasthan, India
Paraguay
Yangon, Myanmar/Burma
A boy sits on a chair, Omo Valley, Ethiopia, 2013
A girl in a doorway, Afghanistan, 2003
Robert De Niro in his screening room in Tribeca, New York, USA, 2010
Steve McCurry speaking with men of the Suma tribe, Omo Valley, Ethiopia, 2012
Camel and oil fields, Kuwait, 1991
Omo Valley, Ethiopia
Portrait from Tagong, Tibet, 1999 (exhibition view at Villa Reale di Monza)
Portrait of a refugee taken in Balochistan, Pakistan, 1981 (exhibition view at Villa Reale di Monza)
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