Pictures of Once Crowded, Now Abandoned Italian Clubs


















“The music is over, our friends are leaving” says the incipit of a very popular 1967 Italian song. The verse feels like a good fit for photographer Antonio La Grotta‘s series Paradise Discotheques.
Antonio visited several discotheques in the north of Italy now abandoned, some of which boasting quite a remarkable architecture, and some called with such names as Caesar’s Palace, Last Empire, Divina, and so on. (Fake) columns and Greek statues adorn the place… But the majesty is gone – as is the case for the ancient times these clubs evoke, nothing is left but ruins. The rubble, the cracks, the rust, the sprawling weeds and the closed gates strike a stark contrast to the imagery they suggest of loud music and young crowds enjoying the night on the dance floor.
Keep looking...

Vera Torok and Robert Pap ‘Enhance’ Their Street Photography with Double Exposures

FotoFirst — Lindley Warren Uses the Camera to Come to Terms with Her Family’s History

Hidden Kingdom — Stefan Bladh’s Cinematic Images Are Loaded with an Uncanny Atmosphere

Martin Lamberty Explores the Salton Sea, a Once-Popular Tourist Destination Now in Decline

FotoFirst — ‘Becoming a Specter’ is Daniel Coburn’s Very Personal Family Photo Album

They Are Not, Yet — Dimitri D’Ippolito Touches on How Italy’s Organized Crime Is Leveling Up

FotoFirst — Felix von der Osten Shares Delicate Photos from an Increasingly Polluted Bangalore
