Mimi Mollica


Mimi Mollica is an Italian photographer, based in London. His work concerns "social issues and topics related to identity, environment, migration and macroscopic human transitions."
Mollica creates self assigned series—his book Terra Nostra is about the permanent scars left behind by the Sicilian Mafia—and works on documentary and photojournalism commissions for magazines and NGOs, and mentoring photographers. His work has also been shown in various group exhibitions and been included in survey publications on street photography.

Life and work

Mollica was born and raised in Palermo, Sicily and is based in London. He began working in photography as an assistant to architectural photographer Hélène Binet. He works professionally on documentary and photojournalism commissions for magazines and NGOs. In 2015 he founded Photo Meet in London, a mentoring service for photographers.
Mollica also creates self assigned series. Over four months in 2007 and 2008 in Senegal, he photographed during the building of a road from Dakar to the new city of Diamniadio, for his series En route to Dakar. Work from this series was praised as "excellent photography" by Anita Sethi in The Independent.
From 2009 he spent seven years working on his book about the permanent scars left behind by the Sicilian Mafia, Terra Nostra. The book was well received by critics—Gerry Badger said its photographs "are eloquent and poetic, and in an era where so much photography is trite and shallow, dense enough to feed both mind and eye"; and Sean O'Hagan, writing in The Guardian, said "it is a work that repays close attention a deft merging of the quotidian and the unsettling".

Publications

Publications by Mollica