“‘Opera’: A Photographer Documents from Center Stage,” The Wall Street Journal

By Lucy Gilmour, via blogs.wsj.com

Teatro di San Carlo, Naples, Italy, 2009

Teatro di San Carlo, Naples, Italy, 2009

Photographer David Leventi’s new monograph, ‘Opera’ (Damiani) is the sum of many parts. “As the son of two architects, I experience an almost religious feeling walking into a grand space such as an opera house” writes Mr. Leventi, an architectural photographer who, over the course of eight years photographed the interiors of more than 40 opera houses around the world. The meticulous, crystalline photographs taken with a large-format camera document the often ornate interiors that stand as symbols of their countries’ wealth, grandeur and musical legacies. But for Mr. Leventi there is another attraction – and one with ties closer to home. “I remember going to see Prokofiev’s ‘War and Peace’ with my grandma at the Metropolitan Opera in NYC. Everything onstage looked like a grand history painting you would find at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, but it was alive.  It was a spectacle,” he recalls. And his grandfather, Anton Gutman, was a gifted cantor who met (and later trained with) famous Danish operatic tenor Helge Rosvaenge whilst both were interned in a Soviet prisoner-of-war camp. Mr. Leventi grew up “listening to him sing while he walked around our living room”. In the introduction to ‘Opera’ Marvin Heiferman writes that “the opera houses Leventi has so dutifully researched, traveled to, and lovingly photographed are, as he describes them, “the spaces in which my grandfather, Anton Gutman, never got the chance to perform.”

Mariinsky Theater, St. Petersburg, Russia. 2009

Mariinsky Theater, St. Petersburg, Russia. 2009

The vantage point that the photographer returns to again and again in this series is from center stage – the viewpoint of the performer looking outwards to a silent symmetrical space. “I believe that the space itself can be the event,” he says. There is a very precise viewpoint yet the images resonate with beauty, power and a sense of anticipation, adding to the weight of the history of each of these great opera houses. Mr. Leventi worked for many years with noted photographer Robert Polidori. “I was his assistant and he my mentor” he says. “I came to appreciate the different type of beauty exhibited by large-format photography, one of immersion, the ability to print photographs so large and clear that they make you feel as if you are enveloped in and existing within a space”. He pauses. “Do buildings have souls?”

The Metropolitan Opera, New York, United States, 2008

The Metropolitan Opera, New York, United States, 2008

Teatro di Villa Aldrovandi Mazzacorati Bologna, Italy, 2014

Teatro di Villa Aldrovandi Mazzacorati, Bologna, Italy, 2014

La Fenice Venice, Italy, 2008

La Fenice, Venice, Italy, 2008

Semperoper, Dresden, Germany, 2014

Semperoper, Dresden, Germany, 2014

Palau de les Arts Reina Sofía, Valencia, Spain, 2014

Palau de les Arts Reina Sofía, Valencia, Spain, 2014

Bayerische Staatsoper. Munich, Germany, 2009

Bayerische Staatsoper, Munich, Germany, 2009

David Leventi: Opera photographs will be displayed at Rick Wester Fine Art Gallery in New York from May 7 through July 10.