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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Santi Visalli is an American photographer and photojournalist who covered the news from social issues to politics to lifestyles to entertainment for over 40 years beginning in the 1960s.
Santi Visalli | |
---|---|
Born | |
Citizenship | Dual US-Italian |
Alma mater | IstitutoTecnico Economico Statale-Messina |
Occupation | Photojournalist |
Spouse | Gayla Beth Jung (1961–present) |
Children | Ivon Anthony |
Website | http://www.santivisalli.com/ |
Born in Messina, Sicily, Santi Visalli left Italy in 1956 to begin a three-year journey around the world by jeep that ultimately landed him in New York City.[1] It was in New York, that he began his career in photojournalism. From 1961 to 1984, Visalli's photos appeared in and on the covers of some 50 magazines and newspapers worldwide, including The New York Times, Newsweek, Time, Life, U.S. News & World Report, Forbes, American Heritage, Paris Match, Stern, Oggi, Epoca, and L'Europeo.
Santi Visalli chose the camera as an instrument of communication to reach a large audience. As he himself says, "Photography speaks a universal language." During the 1960s and '70s, people around the world saw America through his eyes.[2]
Throughout the course of his career, he photographed five presidents of the United States: Lyndon B. Johnson, Richard Nixon, Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan, and Bill Clinton. He also worked on films with such directors as Federico Fellini, Lina Wertmüller, and Peter Yates and photographed numerous film stars and other famous personalities in various fields, including Andy Warhol. He started photographing Warhol early in 1963 and continued until December 31, 1986, three months before Warhol's sudden death.[3]
Expanding to a more permanent form of photojournalistic expression—coffee table books—Visalli created 14 full-color cityscapes published by Rizzoli: Chicago (1987, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2007), Boston (1988), San Francisco (1990, 2002), Los Angeles (1992), Miami (1993), New York ( 1980,1985) (New York 1994 Universe Publishing), Washington, D.C. (1995), and Las Vegas (1996). Each runs more than 200 pages and took him a year or more to shoot. In 2009 in Italy, Vianello published his book Icons, a collection of b&w photos of important people of the 1960s through the 1990s.[4]
His Fine-art photographs are in many private collections, and five are in the permanent collection of the Santa Barbara Museum of Art. Among Visalli's personal favorites are his photo of the World trade center (the most popular of any in his collection). Two other favorites are his special view of the New York Stock Exchange and the portrait of Sofia Loren. However, Visalli views all his pictures as if they were his children. "They are all good," he says.
Mr. Visalli has appeared on American, Brazilian, Japanese, and European radio and television programs, including a RAI-TV special on the most important Sicilians in the arts in New York. He is a former president of the Foreign Press Association of New York,[5] whose 400 members, representing 60 countries, cover the United States for the world, and he served on the board of the Association of Italian Correspondents in North America.
In 2020 Visalli featured in the documentary film Tony & Santi alongside fellow photographer and long time friend, Tony Vaccaro. The film was directed by Andrew Davis. It had its World Premiere at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival and received critical acclaim.
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