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Tuesday, 9 February 2016

Sycilian photographer reveals the unique beauty and strength of 15 Nigerian women living in Sicily's refugee camp

In documenting the evocative hairstyle traditions of West Africa, Sicilian photographer Salvatore Di Gregorio reveals the unique beauty and strength of fifteen Nigerian refugees, and the reality of their life on Italy’s island of hope in a series, Project Mirabella: Tales of Beauty.
"This project is important for me personally and to show my community another side to the refugees: they can be beautiful, approachable, positive."Di Gregorio said.

The number of refugee and migrant arrivals in the EU surpasse on million in 2015 discounting the thousands that died en route. In recent months, Italy, Greece and Turkey have come under scrutiny as the main points of entry for people from Africa and the Middle East.
The situation is perhaps most felt in the Mediterranean’s coastal towns, where over 300,000 have made the perilous crossing to Europe by sea in the last year.

"The topic is high on the agenda now," says Sicily-born, London-based photographer Salvatore Di Gregorio.

But this has been in the news for twenty years in Sicily. To the people, it has always felt like, "this is your problem, you deal with that."
His home is very much on the frontline: half of Italy’s migrants currently reside in the island's temporary centres increasingly met with hostility from locals amid growing economic and political insecurity.

Di Gregorio’s latest series of portraits, Project Mirabella: Tales of Beauty, is a reaction to this climate.

"When you have a crisis like this and you don’t have a state that helps you to handle it, you are left abandoned," Di Gregorio says.
"People are really getting angry. And it’s sad to say, because Sicily was always a welcoming place. We’re unfortunately losing that attitude because at some point you get tired of these things. The people don’t want to deal with this situation any more."
"This project is important for me personally and to show my community another side to the refugees: they can be beautiful, approachable, positive."


Di Gregorio captures fifteen women, all of Nigerian descent, living in a women-only camp in Mirabella Imbaccari, a quiet town of around 5,000 inhabitants. Their right to stay here is being reviewed by ministers this month. In Project Mirabella, Di Gregorio invites each woman to create a look to reflect this troubling, transitory time and their feelings towards their refugee status.

By doing so, he tows the line between portrait photography and reportage. "I’m mixing the language of fashion photography with social life and real-people experience," he says.
"I told them I would like to create a moment where they can express their emotional state as a refugee," Di Gregorio says.
"You are living in a particular time of your life, you won’t be like this forever. I want to see your emotional take on that by doing something you love; your hair and make-up.”
West Africa, the culture and tradition of hair styling is an elaborate art that can express everything from emotions to social status. Looks can communicate different meanings – even down to the finest details, a single strand of hair, a smudge of eyeliner. The challenge was to find the right materials – shells were acquired from a nearby market, make-up from a local artist.
The result is a conceptual yet searingly intimate depiction of these unique and individual women’s displacement from their Nigerian heritage, and their troubled integration into Sicilian culture. Low Cut, an image of a woman called Blessing Decalov, is one of his favourite images: "Blessing said that, when she landed in Sicily, she cut all her hair off. That was exactly what I was looking for. She did that when she got to Sicily to change her life. She wanted to show the world: ‘I’m here like this."

Another portait is of a woman called Sweet Chiogie. "She struck me because she called the look Regina, which means queen. She wanted to feel like a queen, she wanted to be beautiful," he says. "And this is her crown." For Benin-born Chiogie, her look is celebratory: "My purpose of making this hair is because it makes me happy," she told Di Gregorio. "I want people to know how I feel… I want the world to know that I can do something with my hands."

The choice to shoot in black and white is unusual, yet it provides a unified sense of strength.
"It was hard for me to choose black and white because the colour here is so beautiful," admits Di Gregorio. "I wanted to give them the same opportunity to be as they are. Using black and white gives them the same equal emotion."

These portraits not only highlight a topical and contentious subject, but also reveal the moving reality behind the news story. Di Gregorio’s passionate is clear: "That was something that I wanted to say – ‘look, refugees are not only what you see in the media, these are people with pride, with dignity.
"What I found about their leaving the country was this spirit of adventure. They want to see the world and they want to get out of where they are. The motivation, the way that they live, is very much: ‘I want to experience the world.’ These are people that pull on a rucksack and just go.’"

Project Mirabella may hint at our negative preconceptions of refugee life, but Di Gregorio’s subjects’ stories are more complex.

These women have taken many risks to come to Sicily; their tales of beauty are of finding freedom, happiness and a more promising future.


Source: British Journal of Photography

48 comments:

  1. this is making a mess of african beauty

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    1. There is nothing beautiful about those pictures to me. The excessive editing in black took the lustre out of their black skin and hair...making them have bland scar- filled skin and very dull hair.

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  2. Just like her nose. * it's well*

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  3. Fame Quest everywhere, more on my bed

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  4. Hot black
    -D great anonymous now as Vivian Reginalds

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  5. beautifull strong Queens.

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  6. Them rub them charcoal? Nice photos though

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  7. biko there is nothing beautiful in all these women ooo....


    #XENO-FABIAN

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  8. Beautiful! I love the uniqueness of our African heritage. These photographs portrays it all, i love my country i love my heritage and above all i love my culture. Hello Linda Kudos to all your great work am obsessed with this blog.

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  9. Beautiful! I love the uniqueness of our African heritage. These photographs portrays it all, i love my country i love my heritage and above all i love my culture. Hello Linda Kudos to all your great work am obsessed with this blog.

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  10. Beautiful! I love the uniqueness of our African heritage. These photographs portrays it all, i love my country i love my heritage and above all i love my culture. Hello Linda Kudos to all your great work am obsessed with this blog.

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  11. ...These are NOT Nigerians...they're definitely Gambians, Senegalese or Malians...


    Uk Tog

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  12. I smell a rat. So why did she make them all look so black n ugly? Ndi ocha ndi aruruani.

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  13. This photographer is insane trying to make jest of Nigeria. See people wey e dey call "beautiful"... see scars, he can't even edit it.. you now use dark concept for dark people so that they will look like monkeys and select the real ugly ones. This is a packaged mockery and he will never use is photography career to tell a good story. Racist!




    Linda pays - Blessed are the meek

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  14. Oloshos! Wetin dem Dey find?

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  15. Beauty you say? ????.....hmmmm. My lips sealed on this one.

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  16. D second woman looks like ex president ebele jonathan

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  17. Nice















    Enugu's second shoe designer

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  18. Why make them look like coal... Double your hustle

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  19. How can these old village women become refugees if not that they are old prostitutes who are greedy for cheap euro for cheap sex. They do not at all represent Nigerian beauty. They are losers. They should be repatriated.

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  20. Haba we are not this ugly or black now, if he had said kenya now i will believe small, small oooo.....Photographer take note our skin color is brighter, we agree to being black but not ugly black.....we Nigerians are black, beautiful and proud of our skin color. Thank you

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  21. WHICH KIND WORWOR PPLE BE THESE GRANNIES

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  22. Unfortunately, most of these refugee stories and camps are a big scam that continental Europe is too naive to understand. Or maybe they are profiting from it. Are these Nigerian women (they don't look Nigerian BTW) refugees from war, prosecution or prejudice? And if yes, where in Nigerian is this happening? These pictures may be artistic but the artist is in his own tongue in cheek way, mocking these people whoever they are.

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  23. The second lady looks like Former President, Goodluck Ebele Jonathan, lol.
    Maybe they are related

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  24. Ol boy,
    These are runs women,by posting this you dey advertise their market....beauty koo,ugly nii

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  25. I think they are related lol

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  26. owakah (A.K.A. Innosometin)9 February 2016 at 17:08

    Alright

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  27. So no one here has noticed that this women are NOT Nigerian??? Every one in West Africa will now be claiming Nigeria for refugee status because of Boko Haram. These women look Malian, Ivorien and Senegalese. One of them, the one with a single mark on her cheek, is Ghanaian. I can tell this and I have not lived in Nigeria in 35 years. Young people today -- if you'll just take some time of twitter and instagram, you'll be amazed what you can learn...

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    Replies
    1. God bless you. Same thing i said

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  28. they are so freaking ugly, as usual they paint us in this picture...his idea of sarcastic beauty is an irony and these can nogt be Nigerians abeg...

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  29. Black is beauty.

    #FINEST
    #Did you guys miss me?

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  30. Oyibo ideaology of africa and africans will never change! So in year 2015, he thinks those photos are representative of a nigerian woman! I dare to say its condescending for him to think we r still all about charcoal face, facial marks and medieval hairstyles!

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Disclaimer: Opinions expressed in comments are those of the comment writers alone and does not reflect or represent the views of Linda Ikeji.

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