“Italy has always been a place of refuge for me. A true second home. When the pandemic started and was centralized in the north I was worried about my friends and a country I cared about so much. I didn’t know when I’d be able to go back again. Against the recommendations of many people I decided to go by any means necessary. What was revealed to me quite quickly was a country that was still smiling, still eating, and still being so quintessentially Italian.”Liam Cushing
“Sapore di sale, sapore di mare” (Taste of salt, taste of sea) sings Gino Paoli in his classic ode to summer love at the most iconic of Italian locations, the seaside. What began for Liam Cushing as an exploration of Italian life during this idyllic annual period quickly changed in 2020 as Italy (and the world) was plunged into the Covid pandemic. In the early days of winter, Italians found themselves at the epicenter of a spiralling crisis. The taste of sea seemed furthest from anyone’s mind.
As the world became reluctant to visit Italy, Cushing travelled across six regions of the country during the pandemic while Italians grappled with a summer situation unlike any before. What he discovered was an unexpected respite from il virus that Italians were determined to enjoy life. Adding to the unusual nature of the summer season, a country known for its tourism was suddenly without tourists. Piazza San Marco at midday now empty of swarming crowds. Cinqueterre beaches populated by carefully sectioned and spaced families. Italians were able to re-experience their country in a way not possible for decades.
Cushing has captured on film both the resilience and spirit of the Italian people, and a quiet stillness. A collective exhale in the eye of the storm. In the midst of a pandemic and lock downs, the summer period emerged as a collective pause. The photos capture an irrepressible spirit, a bright light, and Italian life undeterred. A mask pulled down to delight in a gelato, a migrant taking shade with a Roma woman, a bocce game paused for an aperitivo break. Perhaps bittersweet, perhaps a taste of salt lingering on the tongue, but a moment of joy in a dark time.
Liam Cushing is a Canadian-Spanish photographer and filmmaker. The son of the late Spanish artist Lupe Rodriguez, raised to interpret the world around him with an artistic eye. He studied at the Etobicoke School for the Arts and the University of Toronto, before working with Art Partner photo agency in New York and London. After assisting several noted fashion photographers including Mario Testino and Josh Olins, Liam launched his own independent work.
At the start of his career he won the Verge photo of the year award and has since been published by Taschen, Vogue, AnOther Magazine, Dazed, and NME. His art film work has been shortlisted in the Berlin Fashion Film Festival, Berlin Commercial Film Festival, Milano Fashion Film Festival, 1.4 Film Festival and featured by Kodak. Liam’s clients have included Dazed, Hugo Boss, Jimmy Choo, Mango, MSGM, Nike, Off-White, Sandro-Paris, Tod’s and Valentino. He has been photographing in Death Valley and South East Asia, and is currently working on two short films Silentium and Restless.