Tags
fp4, ilford, ilford fp4, pigeoneyes, power plant, power station
22 Sunday Mar 2020
Posted 4,5x6 film scan, Industrial
inTags
fp4, ilford, ilford fp4, pigeoneyes, power plant, power station
08 Sunday Sep 2019
Posted 4,5x6 film scan, Industrial
in01 Tuesday May 2018
Posted 4,5x6 film scan, Architecture
inTags
16 Monday Oct 2017
Posted 35mm film scan, Industrial
in21 Thursday Sep 2017
Posted 4,5x6 film scan, Industrial
inTags
03 Friday Mar 2017
Posted 35mm film scan
inTags
abandoned, abbandonata, fabbrica, factory, film, fp4, ilford, ilford fp4
06 Monday Feb 2017
Posted 35mm film scan, Industrial
inTags
abandoned, factory, film, fp4, ilford, ilford fp4, industrial, pigeoneyes
21 Saturday Jan 2017
Posted 4,5x6 film scan, Industrial
in20 Friday Jan 2017
Posted 35mm film scan, Industrial
inTags
abandoned, decay, factory, film, ilford, ilford fp4, pigeoneyes
17 Tuesday Jan 2017
Posted 6x6 film scan, Hospitals
inTags
asylum, film, fp4, ilford, ilford fp4, nof4, pigeoneyes, volterra
Former psychiatric hospital in Volterra, Italy.
6×6 film scan (Ilford FP4)
Oreste Fernando Nannetti (born in Rome December 31, 1927 – dead in Volterra November 24, 1994) was an inmate of the asylum of Volterra.
He often referred to himself as NOF4 (first letters of his name and 4, his id number in the asylum).
He was born without a father (on documents he had, as father name, “N.N.” – In latin, “Nomen Nescio” unknown name).
His mother abandoned him in an orphanage when he was seven and in 1948 he was on trial for outrage to a policeman and during the trial he plead for insanity.
After this moment he spent his whole life in several insane asylums. In 1958 he was interned in the Volterra asylum where he lived up to his dead in 1994.
In the courtyard of the Ferri pavilion he drawn on the wall of the building a huge graffiti using the buckle of his vest. This graffiti was a symbolic story of his life with several notes of science-fiction. It is considered one of the most important “brut art” work ever done.
Most of the graffiti was removed and now it is in a museum in Volterra.
The asylum is totally abandoned but some parts of the graffiti are still in place, slowly fading in rain and time.