On Friday, December 2 at 6:00 pm, Lab27 will host the third session of Publishing and Landscape: Contemporary Photography as Research at Fondazione Benetton Studi e Ricerche (Bomben Spaces) and online via YouTube.
The event focuses on Rive, Piere e Casère, a book by Miro Graziotin (Antiga Edizioni) documenting five years of “walking research” across the Valdobbiadene hills and villages shaped by the Prosecco phenomenon. Photographers Arcangelo Piai and Corrado Piccoli reveal, with the quiet power of light, the resilience and fading beauty of a hilltop civilization thought lost.
Through walking, photography, and conversations with local farmers—the last custodians of this landscape—the project uncovers the stones, signs, and stories that give these hills their identity. The images invite reflection and awareness, not to judge or lament, but to recognize new possibilities in moments of abandonment.
Contributors include Miro Graziotin, Luigi Latini, Carlo Rubini, Daniele Ferrazza, Silvia Benedet, and testimonies from the “people of the hills.”


On Friday, December 2 at 6:00 pm, Lab27 will host the third session of Publishing and Landscape: Contemporary Photography as Research at Fondazione Benetton Studi e Ricerche (Bomben Spaces) and online via YouTube.
The event focuses on Rive, Piere e Casère, a book by Miro Graziotin (Antiga Edizioni) documenting five years of “walking research” across the Valdobbiadene hills and villages shaped by the Prosecco phenomenon. Photographers Arcangelo Piai and Corrado Piccoli reveal, with the quiet power of light, the resilience and fading beauty of a hilltop civilization thought lost.
Through walking, photography, and conversations with local farmers—the last custodians of this landscape—the project uncovers the stones, signs, and stories that give these hills their identity. The images invite reflection and awareness, not to judge or lament, but to recognize new possibilities in moments of abandonment.
Contributors include Miro Graziotin, Luigi Latini, Carlo Rubini, Daniele Ferrazza, Silvia Benedet, and testimonies from the “people of the hills.”
