Bevilacqua’s hermit photos in NYT

An exhibition in Corona, Italy, titled “Into the Silence” by the Italian photographer Carlo Bevilacqua is highlighted by the New York Times.

The NYT article is titled “Hermits of the Third Millennium” and includes a slideshow of 20 photos of hermits (some of whom have been included before in Hermitary’s Features section). About the subjects, article writer James Estrin notes:

Mr. Bevilacqua’s subjects live by themselves, separate from others, by choice. Some have had religious visions and pursue study or prayer. Others are spiritually inclined, but not religious in the classical sense. Then, there are those who just don’t like being among other people in modern society. But all live a life of intentional simplicity and isolation.

Re the photographer:

After spending so much time with hermits, Mr. Bevilacqua believes that greater emphasis on accumulating material wealth, along with the growth of the digital and virtual worlds of video games and social media, has brought mankind further from a quiet pursuit of a simple, reflective life.

He says that this series is like a mirror to the viewer.

“I worked all day long for years to pay for my house, and these people live on nothing, nothing,” he said. “Maybe they are right, and I didn’t really choose. Even if you are not a hermit, you can choose your life.”

URL: http://lens.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/08/01/hermits-of-the-third-millennium/

Modern hermits in Italy

Brief Guardian article entitled “Laptops but no beards for new hermits” on the revival of eremitism in Italy and “on why Catholics are signing up to be hermits.”

URL: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/mar/13/italy

In a brief somewwhat supercilious audio file entitled “The internet is OK but don’t muck around on YouTube” the writer expands on the topic.

URL: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/audio/2008/mar/13/tom.kington.catholics.hermits

Italian women hermits

A new book by Italian sociologist Isacco Turina describes a growing trend in Italy: women embracing eremitism to become hermits. A Telegraph article (and there are others) sums up the book:

Professor Isacco Turina, a sociologist at the University of Bologna, tracked down 37 hermits for his work: “The New Hermits, The Flight from the World in Modern Italy.”

He said there are now as many as 1000 hermits in Italy, with several hundred more dotted across Europe and the US.

Turino’s research showed that the women were usually in their fifties, that most had dropped out of convents because they were dissatisfied with some aspect of Catholic practice, and lived in their own apartments. The women hermits were often writers or artists who had quit the rate race sometime between their thirties and fifties.

URL: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2008/03/13/whermit113.xml

Underground solitary

An Italian sociologist Maurizio Montalbini will spend three years in an underground cave as part of a study on human functions when deprived of natural light. Montalbini has twice before lived underground (and holds the world record for doing so) but not for this long. He will live much like an astronaut, though with some favorite foods and a library of 85 books. URL:
http://edition1.cnn.com/2006/WORLD/europe/10/13/tbr.numbers.caveman/
;
http://english.people.com.cn/200610/15/eng20061015_311869.html.