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Winter Olympics exhibition offers a behind-the-scenes look at rehearsals
Summary
An exhibition in Milan shows 39 photographs by Giampaolo Sgura documenting dress rehearsals for the Feb. 6 Winter Olympics opening ceremony; the show runs at Palazzo Castiglioni through Feb. 17 and will join the Olympic Museum's permanent collection.
Content
An exhibition opened this week at Milan's Palazzo Castiglioni displaying photographs made during dress rehearsals for the Feb. 6 Winter Olympics opening ceremony. The show presents 39 images by Italian photographer Giampaolo Sgura, who was granted access to capture volunteers and production teams at work. The images highlight performers in costume alongside designers, stagehands and creative staff preparing the ceremony. The Olympic Museum in Lausanne organized the project and plans to add the photographs to its permanent collection after the Milan run.
Key details:
- The exhibition features 39 photographs by Giampaolo Sgura taken during dress rehearsals.
- Sgura was given access to more than 1,200 volunteers and rehearsal activities ahead of the Feb. 6 opening ceremony.
- The show is installed on the stairs of Palazzo Castiglioni in Milan's Porta Venezia district and runs through Feb. 17.
- The Olympic Museum in Lausanne is behind the exhibit; its director, Angelita Teo, said the images convey volunteers' effort and the wider human side of the Olympic movement.
- After the Milan presentation closes, the photographs will enter the Olympic Museum's permanent collection.
Summary:
The photographs offer a behind-the-scenes view of the human effort involved in staging the opening ceremony and emphasize the role of volunteers and production teams. The Milan exhibition runs through Feb. 17, after which the images will become part of the Olympic Museum's permanent collection.
