Albori - fraz. di Vietri sul Mare (SA)

Fabrizio Bellomo

Albori è destinata a scomparire?

Da un interrogativo e da un dialogo con gli abitanti del posto nasce il progetto di fabrizio bellomo, con lo scopo di rafforzare l’identità del paese e di far riemergere il racconto di alcune tradizioni

Fabrizio Bellomo, Albori è destinata a scomparire?, 2022, Albori (SA), Campania. Ph. Danilo Donzelli Photography

Artista
Fabrizio Bellomo

Fabrizio Bellomo (Bari, 1982) lives and works in Bari. He is a multi-disciplinary artist, director, curator and writer that carries out his research in a hybrid and experimental way. His approach to the art is broad: he works with archival and historic material, videos and public installations. His art switches between the real and the digital world. His works have been exhibited in personal and collective exhibitions, through public projects, film festivals and presentations. He has attended 39° Torino Film Festival; 38° Torino Film Festival; and Padiglione Italia alla 16° Biennale di Architettura di Venezia, collaborated with Fondazione Giangiacomo Feltrinelli, La Repubblica, MuFoCo, Apulia Film Commission and ICCD. He has exhibited his work at MACRO – Roma; Triennale di Milano; KCB – Beograd; Fundaciò Enric Miralles – Barcelona; Galeria Fab – Tiranë; IIC – Tokyo. He has published artist’s books and essays for Postmedia Books – Milano; Centro Di – Firenze; Quinlan edizioni – San Severino Marche. He has won several awards and grants including: Special Jury Award at 39° Torino Film Festival (Italiana.doc); Italian Council 10; Inside Art Award at Talent Prize 10 and the Best Film at 39° Bellaria Film Festival. His work is part of public and private collections including: MuFoCo Milano; ICCD Roma; Simmons & Simmons Art Collection London/Milano; NCTM e l’arte Milano.

Borgo
Albori - fraz. di Vietri sul Mare (SA)

Albori is a small village, a hamlet of Vietri sul Mare, with a population of around 300 inhabitants.

Situated between the sea and the mountains, it rises up in front of the beautiful Mount Falerio while enjoying a panoramic view of the Gulf of Salerno. There are several hypotheses on the etymology of Albori, but the most accredited would be “Albole” due to a mineral water source (aqua albula) that exists in the area. Historical sources give little information on its origins. Around the year 1000, the whole Vietri area was sparsely populated. Due to Lombard princes gifting land to Amalfi and Atranese families of Nordic origin, and to the subsequent colonization promoted by the Monastery of SS. Trinità di Cava, the area became home to many small hamlets that were independent from Salerno and from the Cava Abbey. This process led to Albori being mentioned as a hamlet as early as 1324, even if it still had to wait until 1610 to have its own independent parish.

Today, Albori appears as an agglomeration of whitewashed houses, arranged on several levels and connected by narrow alleys that can be explored on foot or by mule, which are still used today for the transport of goods and materials. In the heart of the village, you’ll find the parish church dedicated to Santa Margherita di Antiochia. Inside the sacred building, there are frescoes from the Neapolitan school, which boasts amongst its exponents the Baroque decorator Francesco Solimena (1657-1747). The Museum of Ceramics is in the turret of Villa Guariglia where you can find Vietri ceramics dating from the eighteenth century to the first half of the twentieth century.

Si ringraziano la Regione Campania, Giovanni De Simone - Sindaco, i Consiglieri comunali Daniele Benincasa e Salvatore Pellegrino, Vittorio Mendozzi, la Pro Loco di Vietri sul Mare, Andrea Carmine De Simone, l'associazione Albori 2000. Gli artigiani e coloro che hanno collaborato alla realizzazione del progetto: Ceramica Artistica Solimene, Rosa Musco, Emilio Pellegrino e la casa di produzione Friccicarella film di Graziana di Santo. Inoltre si ringraziano Enzo Santoriello, Lucio Liguori e tutta la comunità di Albori, in particolar modo Michele Avallone, Maria Del Pizzo e Amalia Ferrara.