A City in the Mind

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Many years ago, Peter Fraser was captivated by Italo Calvino’s Invisible Cities (1972). In 2006 he re-read this
extraordinary novel and, struck anew by its emotional charge, began to photograph his current home London with the
aim of creating an imagined “city in the mind”. Calvino’s book is a fictive exchange between the Tartar Emperor Kublai
Khan and the explorer Marco Polo, whom Khan commissioned to collect news from across his massive empire in the
late 1200s. Every evening Polo describes a new city from his travels more fabulous and exotic than the last, thus
philosophising on the myriad creative possibilities of a “city”. (Many believe Calvino’s cities are indeed different interpretations
of one and the same place – perhaps Venice.) Fraser recasts Calvino’s notion of an invisible city to create a
poetic vision of London that transcends the physical, and can only be experienced in the imagination.
Peter Fraser was born in Cardiff in 1953 and graduated in photography from Manchester Polytechnic University in
1976. In 1982 Fraser began working with a Plaubel Makina camera, which led to an exhibition with William Eggleston
at the Arnolfini, Bristol, in 1984. Fraser’s many books include Two Blue Buckets (1988), Deep Blue (1997), and Lost
for Words (2010). In 2002 the Photographers’ Gallery, London, staged a twenty-year survey of Fraser’s work, and in
2004 he was shortlisted for the Citibank Photography Prize.
Exhibition: Brancolini Grimaldi, London, 25 May to 21 July 2012
Co-published with Brancolini Grimaldi, London