Mirella Ricciardi
Mirella Ricciardi | |
---|---|
Born |
Mirella Rocco 14 July 1931 Kenya |
Occupation |
Photographer, primarily of African subjects Author Adventurer |
Spouse(s) | Lorenzo Ricciardi |
Children | 2 daughters |
Parent(s) |
Mario Rocco (1893-1975) Giselle Banau-Varilla |
Mirella Ricciardi (born 14 July 1931), described by one enthusiast as a "renowned creative force" is a Kenyan born photographer and author.[1][2] Additionally, in 1962 she appeared as a movie actress, playing the part of a woman whose back-story bore some resemblance to her own.[3]
Life
Mirella Rocco was the middle child and elder daughter of her parents' three recorded children. Mario Rocco (1893-1975), her father, came originally from Naples and is described variously as an Italian cavalry officer who had taken part in the First World War as a pilot,[4] and as an "Italian rancher [who operated] 3,500 acres near Nairobi".[5] Her mother, Giselle Banau-Varilla, was a French born sculptress who had once been a pupil of Rodin.[4] Both her parents had been "married for many years" when they set off for Africa at the end of 1928, but "not to each other".[6] The idea, according to one source, was to elope to the Belgian Congo and make their fortune by killing elephants and selling the ivory. However, after a "year-long foot safari" Giselle became pregnant and the couple "headed for Kenya to find a hospital".[4] It was in Kenya that they settled. Mirella's elder brother, Dorian Rocco (1930-2013), was born first. The youngest of the three children, Orla, was born in 1933.
Mario Rocco acquired 5,000 acres on the shores of Lake Naivasha which he farmed. The children enjoyed the privileged childhood familiar to many "white" Kenyan contemporaries in the 1930s. Mirella would later look back with dismay but also with a singular candour at the racial precepts with which she had grown up: "I had always been a white African, a product of the colonial system I had been raised in ... I considered the Africans as my servants, not human beings like myself."[2] War came to Kenya in 1940, when Mirella Rocco was just nine. Her father was forty-seven. Kenya was "British" and "Mario Rocco" was "Italian". He was arrested and taken to a camp at Kabete before being transferred to South Africa for four years. When he returned home in June 1944 he was, according to one source, "old, toothless and a broken man". Between 1940 and 1944 the three children were not permitted to attend school, so they were taught at home.[7] After July 1944 they were permitted to attend the Kijabe Rift valley mission school, following which their final school years were spent in Nairobi.[7]
For two years during the 1950s Mirella Rocco undertook an internship in Paris with the fashion photographer Harry Meerson.[8] In 1957 a press photograph of her sitting in front of a tourist poster for Uganda and Kenya, taken while she was on a visit to New York, was accompanied by a caption stating that back in Kenya she had already "acted as cameraman, guide and hunter on more than 15 safaris".[5] But it was clear by then that the camera was more important for her than those other safari accessories.[7]
It was around this time that Mirella Rocco married Lorenzo Ricciardi. He had recruited her as the "stills photogapher" in connection with a movie that he was shooting in East Africa. Various sources describe Lorenzo Ricciardi as "an Italian adventurer": he is certainly a man who has led much of his life pursued by a succession of seemingly fantastical anecdotes.[9] Despite his Neapolitan familial provenance, he was reportedly born in a Milanese prison because there was insufficient time for his mother to reach the hospital.[9] As a child he watched as "the Nazis" burned down the family home.[9] Later he made so much money by playing roulette that he was able to purchase and, till it sank, "sail through a string of monsoons on" an "ocean-going dhow".[9] Mirella herself has written of their adventure-strewn marriage with some candour: it was not always the most stable or monogamous of partnerships.[1] Nevertheless, it is as Mirella Ricciardi that she is identified in almost all of the accessible sources, which take their lead from her own published output.[1]
Over the next few years some sources indicate that the couple lived for a time in in various African countries while elsewhere it is stated that they made their home in Rome[7] or in London. In any case, extensive travel remained integral to their lives, although the childhood assumption that the Rocco children "belonged" in Africa[7] was progressively set aside after the so-called Mau Mau Uprising and more particularly, in Mirella's case, after she married Lorenzo. In 1971 she published, in London, her first volume of photographs, entitled "Vanishing Africa". Her stated intention was "to photograph the tribal life and customs of the people of Africa before they changed forever".[1] The result was an immediate commercial success.[10] By 2014 there had been four further photo-volumes. The couple by this time reportedly divided their lives between homes in London and in Italy.[1]
Personal
Mirella Ricciari's family life is well chronicled in her own published works. Mario Rocco suffered increasingly poor health during his final years and died aged 82 in a Nairobi hospital on 5 May 1975 a month after being rushed in with a broken femur. Mirella's mother died, also in Kenya, soon afterwards.[7]
Lorenzo and Mirella Ricciardi's marriage resulted in two daughters the elder of whom, Marina, predeceased her parents when she was aged only 36. The cause of her death is given variously as cancer[1] and/or "Africa’s sunshine".[9] Ricciardi has written extensively of her grief and of the sense of guilt that she suffered following her child's death.[7]
Output
- Vanishing Africa, revised edition 1974, Collins, London, ISBN 0-00-211876-9.
- Vanishing Amazon, Abrams, New York 1991 ISBN 0-8109-3915-0.
- African Saga, Collins, London 1981, ISBN 0-00-216191-5.
- with Lorenzo Ricciardi: African Rainbow: Across Africa by Boat, Ebury Press, London 1989, ISBN 0-85223-746-4.
- African Visions The Diary of an African Photographer, Cassell & Co, London 2000, ISBN 0-304354015.
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Vanishing Africa: The poignant tale and images of Mirella Ricciardi". Afritorial. 1 October 2012. Retrieved 19 July 2017.
- 1 2 Ciugu Mwagiru (22 August 2015). "They put Kenya on world map, so why the hatred?". Daily Nation (online), Nairobi. Retrieved 19 July 2017.
- ↑ Richard Wrigley (2008). Cinematic Rome. Troubador Publishing Ltd. p. 72. ISBN 978-1-906510-28-2.
- 1 2 3 Nicki Grihault (17 September 2003). "Hunter's daughter who saved the elephants". This source is more directly concerned with Mirella Ricciardi's younger sister who married a young Scottish zoologist and became Oria Douglas-Hamilton. Daily Telegraph, London. Retrieved 19 July 2017.
- 1 2 "Press Photo Mirella Rocco Big Game Hunter Africa". Historic Images Outlet. 1957. Retrieved 19 July 2017.
- ↑ Fiametta Rocco (21 September 2003). "The Miraculous Fever-Tree (First chapter extract placed online)". New York Times. Retrieved 19 July 2017.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Dr S S Nagi (7 November 2015). "Book review of African Saga by Mirella Ricciardi". Amazon.com. Retrieved 19 July 2017.
- ↑ "Mirella Ricciardi". Bernheimer Fine Art Photography, Luzern. Retrieved 20 July 2017.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Aidan Hartley (13 August 2011). "Wild Life ... Indian Ocean". The Spectator, London. Retrieved 21 July 2017.
- ↑ Afrika, mon amour in Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, 23 July 2011, page 34