
Changing Room explores the question of gender identity through one of the most influential cultural phenomena in the world: football.
Chiara Calgaro begins her photographic journey with the team she plays for — a self-managed, self-funded collective made up of women*, trans, and non-binary people — and continues with a journey across Europe in search of other queer teams.
With faces often obscured, the athletes’ bodies bend, twist, and perform for the camera, just as every individual “performs” throughout life behaviors expected to match the gender assigned at birth.
Through the enactment of “parody-gestures”, the artist suggests the possibility of reimagining gender identity within a more nuanced and complex narrative — one that permeates social spaces starting from the dimension of play.
The football team’s changing room becomes a microcosm for experimenting with practices that challenge those dominant in society, suggesting new forms of collectivity and participation, and using the world’s most popular sport as a tool for self-determination.
Photographs by Chiara Calgaro
Photo editing by Chiara Calgaro, Melissa Pallini, Altana
Texts by Alma Sammel, Deniz Nihan Aktan
Translations by Sara Madonia
Book design by Melissa Pallini
Softcover,
230x283 mm, 116 pages
English / Italian
+ 6 stickers
500 copies
ISBN 979-12-243-0504-0
Altana was born in 2018 in Venice after the encounter between Francesco Paleari, Elia Pinna and Francesco Villa. It’s meant to be a place for conversations and exchange around photography, genuinely dedicated to authorial research and care for editorial projects. Altana refuses to be labeled but rather prefers the dynamism of an evolving hybrid studio.
Altana is not a publisher, it is not a physical place and either a concept. Altana is a flying carpet made of wood from which you can enjoy a new perspective through photography.
You can find our publications here: Micamera, Milano / Dashwood, New York / Librairie du Palais, Arles / Le Monte-en-l’air, Paris / Actes Sud, Arles / Choisi, Lugano / Leporello, Roma / Tipi, Brussels / Corraini 121+, Milano / Studio Faganel, Gorizia