Alla Carta 24 Blob

This issue of Alla Carta is a blob, literally “a chaotic or random mass, a mess”. In this case, an indefinite mass of images, to all appearances lacking any formal rigour or consistency: the articles and interviews, in all their density, follow on from one another across nebulous boundaries.
It was 1989 when Angelo Guglielmi, historical director of Rai 3 (an Italian public broadcasting channel), and film critics Enrico Ghezzi and Marco Giusti created Blob, one of the longest-running television programmes on Italian television. The programme describes itself as follows: “Twenty minutes of surrogate television. TV disassembled, reassembled and laid bare by editing to reveal what the video and its everyday protagonists are actually telling us.”

The result may indeed seem chaotic, but certainly not random. Blob seems to evoke the technique of appropriation art, appropriating images from Italian television to give them new life and meaning. Quite the opposite of a mess. With an approach similar to repurposing, Blob reuses materials that have already been ‘consumed’—television quizzes, news shows, focus programmes—and re-assembles them into a frenetic collage that reveals the inconsistencies, absurdities and contradictions of Italian society and beyond, all with a certain irony.

In more than 30 years of programming, Blob’s ‘chaotic’ blend of images has, on the contrary, provided a highly detailed cross-section of social evolution and, more generally, how we represent it. This issue of Alla Carta walks the thin line between chaos and calm, visual disorder and the desire to send a careful and timely message.

20€
  • Pages: 320
  • Dimension: 225 x 310 mm
  • Edition: ss24
  • ISSN: 2280-9309