Gianni Cipriano Photography | Archive

  • Archive
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area
  • About
  • Contact
  • PORTFOLIO
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
88 images found
twitterlinkedinfacebook

Loading ()...

  • ROME, ITALY - 6 APRIL, 2014: Customers have dinner at Pizza Ciro, a pizzeria and restaurant seized by the police in January, in Rome, Italy, on April 6th 2014.<br />
<br />
Pizza Ciro, along with more than 20 other well-known restaurants in Rome, is under special court administration after police raids in January, when arrest warrants were issued for 90 people accused of being linked to the Contini clan, part of the Neapolitan Mafia known as the Camorra. Prosecutors allege the restaurants were used for money-laundering to "clean” some of the illicit funds stemming from drug-running, extortion rackets and usury.
    CIPG_20140407_NYT_MafiaRestaurants__...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 6 APRIL, 2014: Salvatore, a pizzaoiolo working at Pizza Ciro, a pizzeria and restaurant seized by the police in January, places a cooked pizza on a dish, in central Rome, Italy, on April 6th 2014.<br />
<br />
Pizza Ciro, along with more than 20 other well-known restaurants in Rome, is under special court administration after police raids in January, when arrest warrants were issued for 90 people accused of being linked to the Contini clan, part of the Neapolitan Mafia known as the Camorra. Prosecutors allege the restaurants were used for money-laundering to "clean” some of the illicit funds stemming from drug-running, extortion rackets and usury.
    CIPG_20140407_NYT_MafiaRestaurants__...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 6 APRIL, 2014: Salvatore, a pizzaoiolo working at Pizza Ciro, a pizzeria and restaurant seized by the police in January, places a cooked pizza on a dish, in central Rome, Italy, on April 6th 2014.<br />
<br />
Pizza Ciro, along with more than 20 other well-known restaurants in Rome, is under special court administration after police raids in January, when arrest warrants were issued for 90 people accused of being linked to the Contini clan, part of the Neapolitan Mafia known as the Camorra. Prosecutors allege the restaurants were used for money-laundering to "clean” some of the illicit funds stemming from drug-running, extortion rackets and usury.
    CIPG_20140407_NYT_MafiaRestaurants__...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 6 APRIL, 2014: Exterior of Pizza Ciro, a pizzeria and restaurant seized by the police in January, in central Rome, Italy, on April 6th 2014.<br />
<br />
Pizza Ciro, along with more than 20 other well-known restaurants in Rome, is under special court administration after police raids in January, when arrest warrants were issued for 90 people accused of being linked to the Contini clan, part of the Neapolitan Mafia known as the Camorra. Prosecutors allege the restaurants were used for money-laundering to "clean” some of the illicit funds stemming from drug-running, extortion rackets and usury.
    CIPG_20140407_NYT_MafiaRestaurants__...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 6 APRIL, 2014: Exterior of Pizza Ciro, a pizzeria and restaurant seized by the police in January, in central Rome, Italy, on April 6th 2014.<br />
<br />
Pizza Ciro, along with more than 20 other well-known restaurants in Rome, is under special court administration after police raids in January, when arrest warrants were issued for 90 people accused of being linked to the Contini clan, part of the Neapolitan Mafia known as the Camorra. Prosecutors allege the restaurants were used for money-laundering to "clean” some of the illicit funds stemming from drug-running, extortion rackets and usury.
    CIPG_20140407_NYT_MafiaRestaurants__...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 6 APRIL, 2014: Kafih El Houssaine, 50, a Moroccan-born<br />
waitor at Pizza Ciro, a pizzeria and restaurant seized by the police in January, waits for clients, in central Rome, Italy, on April 6th 2014.<br />
<br />
<br />
"We were very surprised," Mr Houssaine said; "I've worked with them for 18<br />
years and never had a single doubt."<br />
<br />
Pizza Ciro, along with more than 20 other well-known restaurants in Rome, is under special court administration after police raids in January, when arrest warrants were issued for 90 people accused of being linked to the Contini clan, part of the Neapolitan Mafia known as the Camorra. Prosecutors allege the restaurants were used for money-laundering to "clean” some of the illicit funds stemming from drug-running, extortion rackets and usury.
    CIPG_20140407_NYT_MafiaRestaurants__...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 6 APRIL, 2014: A waitor at Pizza Ciro, a pizzeria and restaurant seized by the police in January, in Rome, Italy, on April 6th 2014.<br />
<br />
Pizza Ciro, along with more than 20 other well-known restaurants in Rome, is under special court administration after police raids in January, when arrest warrants were issued for 90 people accused of being linked to the Contini clan, part of the Neapolitan Mafia known as the Camorra. Prosecutors allege the restaurants were used for money-laundering to "clean” some of the illicit funds stemming from drug-running, extortion rackets and usury.
    CIPG_20140407_NYT_MafiaRestaurants__...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 6 APRIL, 2014: Paintings of the volcano Mount Vesuvius and of the Gulf of Naples inside Pizza Ciro, a pizzeria and restaurant seized by the police in January, in central Rome, Italy, on April 6th 2014.<br />
<br />
Pizza Ciro, along with more than 20 other well-known restaurants in Rome, is under special court administration after police raids in January, when arrest warrants were issued for 90 people accused of being linked to the Contini clan, part of the Neapolitan Mafia known as the Camorra. Prosecutors allege the restaurants were used for money-laundering to "clean” some of the illicit funds stemming from drug-running, extortion rackets and usury.
    CIPG_20140407_NYT_MafiaRestaurants__...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 6 APRIL, 2014: Salvatore, a pizzaoiolo working at Pizza Ciro, a pizzeria and restaurant seized by the police in January, puts a pizza in the oven, in central Rome, Italy, on April 6th 2014.<br />
<br />
Pizza Ciro, along with more than 20 other well-known restaurants in Rome, is under special court administration after police raids in January, when arrest warrants were issued for 90 people accused of being linked to the Contini clan, part of the Neapolitan Mafia known as the Camorra. Prosecutors allege the restaurants were used for money-laundering to "clean” some of the illicit funds stemming from drug-running, extortion rackets and usury.
    CIPG_20140407_NYT_MafiaRestaurants__...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 6 APRIL, 2014: Menus are piled up on a table at the entrance of Pizza Ciro, a pizzeria and restaurant seized by the police in January, in central Rome, Italy, on April 6th 2014.<br />
<br />
Pizza Ciro, along with more than 20 other well-known restaurants in Rome, is under special court administration after police raids in January, when arrest warrants were issued for 90 people accused of being linked to the Contini clan, part of the Neapolitan Mafia known as the Camorra. Prosecutors allege the restaurants were used for money-laundering to "clean” some of the illicit funds stemming from drug-running, extortion rackets and usury.
    CIPG_20140407_NYT_MafiaRestaurants__...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 6 APRIL, 2014: Menus are piled up on a table at the entrance of Pizza Ciro, a pizzeria and restaurant seized by the police in January, in central Rome, Italy, on April 6th 2014.<br />
<br />
Pizza Ciro, along with more than 20 other well-known restaurants in Rome, is under special court administration after police raids in January, when arrest warrants were issued for 90 people accused of being linked to the Contini clan, part of the Neapolitan Mafia known as the Camorra. Prosecutors allege the restaurants were used for money-laundering to "clean” some of the illicit funds stemming from drug-running, extortion rackets and usury.
    CIPG_20140407_NYT_MafiaRestaurants__...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 6 APRIL, 2014: Interior of Pizza Ciro, a pizzeria and restaurant seized by the police in January, with a painting of of the volcano Mount Vesuvius and Pulcinella,  a classical character that originated in the commedia dell'arte of the 17th century and became a stock character in Neapolitan puppetry, in central Rome, Italy, on April 6th 2014.<br />
<br />
Pizza Ciro, along with more than 20 other well-known restaurants in Rome, is under special court administration after police raids in January, when arrest warrants were issued for 90 people accused of being linked to the Contini clan, part of the Neapolitan Mafia known as the Camorra. Prosecutors allege the restaurants were used for money-laundering to "clean” some of the illicit funds stemming from drug-running, extortion rackets and usury.
    CIPG_20140407_NYT_MafiaRestaurants__...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 6 APRIL, 2014: Pizza take away boxes are piled up on a shelf under a painting of Mount Vesuvius at Pizza Ciro, a pizzeria and restaurant seized by the police in January, in central Rome, Italy, on April 6th 2014.<br />
<br />
Pizza Ciro, along with more than 20 other well-known restaurants in Rome, is under special court administration after police raids in January, when arrest warrants were issued for 90 people accused of being linked to the Contini clan, part of the Neapolitan Mafia known as the Camorra. Prosecutors allege the restaurants were used for money-laundering to "clean” some of the illicit funds stemming from drug-running, extortion rackets and usury.
    CIPG_20140407_NYT_MafiaRestaurants__...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 6 APRIL, 2014: The pizza prep table, oven and take away boxes at Pizza Ciro, a pizzeria and restaurant seized by the police in January, in central Rome, Italy, on April 6th 2014.<br />
<br />
Pizza Ciro, along with more than 20 other well-known restaurants in Rome, is under special court administration after police raids in January, when arrest warrants were issued for 90 people accused of being linked to the Contini clan, part of the Neapolitan Mafia known as the Camorra. Prosecutors allege the restaurants were used for money-laundering to "clean” some of the illicit funds stemming from drug-running, extortion rackets and usury.
    CIPG_20140407_NYT_MafiaRestaurants__...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 6 APRIL, 2014: Interior of Pizza Ciro, a pizzeria and restaurant seized by the police in January, in Rome, Italy, on April 6th 2014. <br />
<br />
<br />
Pizza Ciro, along with more than 20 other well-known restaurants in Rome, is under special court administration after police raids in January, when arrest warrants were issued for 90 people accused of being linked to the Contini clan, part of the Neapolitan Mafia known as the Camorra. Prosecutors allege the restaurants were used for money-laundering to "clean” some of the illicit funds stemming from drug-running, extortion rackets and usury.
    CIPG_20140407_NYT_MafiaRestaurants__...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 6 APRIL, 2014: The pizza prep table, oven and take away boxes at Pizza Ciro, a pizzeria and restaurant seized by the police in January, in central Rome, Italy, on April 6th 2014.<br />
<br />
Pizza Ciro, along with more than 20 other well-known restaurants in Rome, is under special court administration after police raids in January, when arrest warrants were issued for 90 people accused of being linked to the Contini clan, part of the Neapolitan Mafia known as the Camorra. Prosecutors allege the restaurants were used for money-laundering to "clean” some of the illicit funds stemming from drug-running, extortion rackets and usury.
    CIPG_20140407_NYT_MafiaRestaurants__...jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 10 APRIL 2014: (L-R) CEO Antonio De Matteis, Founder and President Ciro Paone and Vice President and General Manager Maria Giovanna Paone, pose for a family portrait at the Kiton headquarters and factory in Arzano, Italy, on April 16th 2014.<br />
<br />
Kiton is a luxury clothing company co-founded in 1956  in Naples by Ciro Paone, a fifth-generation fabric merchant. Launched in 1968, the brand produces suits, overcoats, ties, shirts, trousers, knitwear, outwear, shoes, leather accessories, and bags,  womenswear, fragrances and eyewear. Kiton produces 22,000 men suits per year and their sales proceeds was of 95mln euros.
    CIPG_20140410_INYT_Kiton__M3_6706.jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 10 APRIL 2014: A portrait of Ciro Paone, Founder and President of Kiton, is here at the entrance of the Kiton headquarters and factory in Arzano, Italy, on April 16th 2014.<br />
<br />
Kiton is a luxury clothing company co-founded in 1956  in Naples by Ciro Paone, a fifth-generation fabric merchant. Launched in 1968, the brand produces suits, overcoats, ties, shirts, trousers, knitwear, outwear, shoes, leather accessories, and bags,  womenswear, fragrances and eyewear. Kiton produces 22,000 men suits per year and their sales proceeds was of 95mln euros.
    CIPG_20140410_INYT_Kiton__M3_6531.jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 10 APRIL 2014: A portrait of Ciro Paone, Founder and President of Kiton, is here at the entrance of the Kiton headquarters and factory in Arzano, Italy, on April 16th 2014.<br />
<br />
Kiton is a luxury clothing company co-founded in 1956  in Naples by Ciro Paone, a fifth-generation fabric merchant. Launched in 1968, the brand produces suits, overcoats, ties, shirts, trousers, knitwear, outwear, shoes, leather accessories, and bags,  womenswear, fragrances and eyewear. Kiton produces 22,000 men suits per year and their sales proceeds was of 95mln euros.
    CIPG_20140410_INYT_Kiton__M3_6521.jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 10 APRIL 2014: CEO of Kiton Antonio De Mattesi (background, center-left) walks in the cafeteria, behind the reflection of a photograph of Founder of Ciro Paone meeting former President of Italy Carlo Arzeglio Ciampi, at the Kiton headquarters and factory in Arzano, Italy, on April 16th 2014.<br />
<br />
Kiton is a luxury clothing company co-founded in 1956  in Naples by Ciro Paone, a fifth-generation fabric merchant. Launched in 1968, the brand produces suits, overcoats, ties, shirts, trousers, knitwear, outwear, shoes, leather accessories, and bags,  womenswear, fragrances and eyewear. Kiton produces 22,000 men suits per year and their sales proceeds was of 95mln euros.
    CIPG_20140410_INYT_Kiton__M3_6691.jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 10 APRIL 2014: President and Founder of Kiton Ciro Paone, 81, goes from one office to the other in his wheelchair here at the Kiton headquarters and factory in Arzano, Italy, on April 16th 2014.<br />
<br />
Kiton is a luxury clothing company co-founded in 1956  in Naples by Ciro Paone, a fifth-generation fabric merchant. Launched in 1968, the brand produces suits, overcoats, ties, shirts, trousers, knitwear, outwear, shoes, leather accessories, and bags,  womenswear, fragrances and eyewear. Kiton produces 22,000 men suits per year and their sales proceeds was of 95mln euros.
    CIPG_20140410_INYT_Kiton__M3_6684.jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 10 APRIL 2014: President and Founder of Kiton Ciro Paone, 81, poses for a portrait at the Kiton headquarters and factory in Arzano, Italy, on April 16th 2014.<br />
<br />
Kiton is a luxury clothing company co-founded in 1956  in Naples by Ciro Paone, a fifth-generation fabric merchant. Launched in 1968, the brand produces suits, overcoats, ties, shirts, trousers, knitwear, outwear, shoes, leather accessories, and bags,  womenswear, fragrances and eyewear. Kiton produces 22,000 men suits per year and their sales proceeds was of 95mln euros.
    CIPG_20140410_INYT_Kiton__M3_6652.jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 10 APRIL 2014: A portrait of Ciro Paone, Founder and President of Kiton, is here at the entrance of the Kiton headquarters and factory in Arzano, Italy, on April 16th 2014.<br />
<br />
Kiton is a luxury clothing company co-founded in 1956  in Naples by Ciro Paone, a fifth-generation fabric merchant. Launched in 1968, the brand produces suits, overcoats, ties, shirts, trousers, knitwear, outwear, shoes, leather accessories, and bags,  womenswear, fragrances and eyewear. Kiton produces 22,000 men suits per year and their sales proceeds was of 95mln euros.
    CIPG_20140410_INYT_Kiton__M3_6515.jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 10 APRIL 2014: CEO of Kiton Antonio De Matteis walks up the stairs towards his office at the Kiton headquarters and factory in Arzano, Italy, on April 16th 2014.<br />
<br />
Kiton is a luxury clothing company co-founded in 1956  in Naples by Ciro Paone, a fifth-generation fabric merchant. Launched in 1968, the brand produces suits, overcoats, ties, shirts, trousers, knitwear, outwear, shoes, leather accessories, and bags,  womenswear, fragrances and eyewear. Kiton produces 22,000 men suits per year and their sales proceeds was of 95mln euros.
    CIPG_20140410_INYT_Kiton__M3_7171.jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 10 APRIL 2014: A tailor marks the fabrics to be cut at the men's suit production unit at the Kiton headquarters and factory in Arzano, Italy, on April 16th 2014.<br />
<br />
Kiton is a luxury clothing company co-founded in 1956  in Naples by Ciro Paone, a fifth-generation fabric merchant. Launched in 1968, the brand produces suits, overcoats, ties, shirts, trousers, knitwear, outwear, shoes, leather accessories, and bags,  womenswear, fragrances and eyewear. Kiton produces 22,000 men suits per year and their sales proceeds was of 95mln euros.
    CIPG_20140410_INYT_Kiton__M3_6851.jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 10 APRIL 2014: A tailor sews a blazer at the men's suit production unit at the Kiton headquarters and factory in Arzano, Italy, on April 16th 2014.<br />
<br />
Kiton is a luxury clothing company co-founded in 1956  in Naples by Ciro Paone, a fifth-generation fabric merchant. Launched in 1968, the brand produces suits, overcoats, ties, shirts, trousers, knitwear, outwear, shoes, leather accessories, and bags,  womenswear, fragrances and eyewear. Kiton produces 22,000 men suits per year and their sales proceeds was of 95mln euros.
    CIPG_20140410_INYT_Kiton__M3_6749.jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 10 APRIL 2014: An employee marks the fabrics to be cut at the men's suit production unit at the Kiton headquarters and factory in Arzano, Italy, on April 16th 2014.<br />
<br />
Kiton is a luxury clothing company co-founded in 1956  in Naples by Ciro Paone, a fifth-generation fabric merchant. Launched in 1968, the brand produces suits, overcoats, ties, shirts, trousers, knitwear, outwear, shoes, leather accessories, and bags,  womenswear, fragrances and eyewear. Kiton produces 22,000 men suits per year and their sales proceeds was of 95mln euros.
    CIPG_20140410_INYT_Kiton__M3_6583.jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 10 APRIL 2014: CEO Antonio De Matteis is here at the Kiton headquarters and factory in Arzano, Italy, on April 16th 2014.<br />
<br />
Kiton is a luxury clothing company co-founded in 1956  in Naples by Ciro Paone, a fifth-generation fabric merchant. Launched in 1968, the brand produces suits, overcoats, ties, shirts, trousers, knitwear, outwear, shoes, leather accessories, and bags,  womenswear, fragrances and eyewear. Kiton produces 22,000 men suits per year and their sales proceeds was of 95mln euros.
    CIPG_20140410_INYT_Kiton__M3_7197.jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 10 APRIL 2014: Fabrics supervisor Luigi Paone places an icon of San Gennaro, the saint protector of Naples, at the Fabrics division at the Kiton headquarters and factory in Arzano, Italy, on April 16th 2014.<br />
<br />
Kiton is a luxury clothing company co-founded in 1956  in Naples by Ciro Paone, a fifth-generation fabric merchant. Launched in 1968, the brand produces suits, overcoats, ties, shirts, trousers, knitwear, outwear, shoes, leather accessories, and bags,  womenswear, fragrances and eyewear. Kiton produces 22,000 men suits per year and their sales proceeds was of 95mln euros.
    CIPG_20140410_INYT_Kiton__M3_7149.jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 10 APRIL 2014: CEO of Kiton Antonio De Matteis shows a Pura Vicuna fabric at Fabrics unit at the Kiton headquarters and factory in Arzano, Italy, on April 16th 2014.<br />
<br />
Kiton is a luxury clothing company co-founded in 1956  in Naples by Ciro Paone, a fifth-generation fabric merchant. Launched in 1968, the brand produces suits, overcoats, ties, shirts, trousers, knitwear, outwear, shoes, leather accessories, and bags,  womenswear, fragrances and eyewear. Kiton produces 22,000 men suits per year and their sales proceeds was of 95mln euros.
    CIPG_20140410_INYT_Kiton__M3_7124.jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 10 APRIL 2014: CEO of Kiton Antonio De Matteis shows a 13.5 fabric at Fabrics unit at the Kiton headquarters and factory in Arzano, Italy, on April 16th 2014.<br />
<br />
Kiton is a luxury clothing company co-founded in 1956  in Naples by Ciro Paone, a fifth-generation fabric merchant. Launched in 1968, the brand produces suits, overcoats, ties, shirts, trousers, knitwear, outwear, shoes, leather accessories, and bags,  womenswear, fragrances and eyewear. Kiton produces 22,000 men suits per year and their sales proceeds was of 95mln euros.
    CIPG_20140410_INYT_Kiton__M3_7111.jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 10 APRIL 2014: Numbered boxes containing ties (each number corresponding to a client, and each color to a country) are stored at the Kiton Tie production unit at the Kiton headquarters and factory in Arzano, Italy, on April 16th 2014.<br />
<br />
Kiton is a luxury clothing company co-founded in 1956  in Naples by Ciro Paone, a fifth-generation fabric merchant. Launched in 1968, the brand produces suits, overcoats, ties, shirts, trousers, knitwear, outwear, shoes, leather accessories, and bags,  womenswear, fragrances and eyewear. Kiton produces 22,000 men suits per year and their sales proceeds was of 95mln euros.
    CIPG_20140410_INYT_Kiton__M3_7028.jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 10 APRIL 2014: Students are here at work at the Kiton Tailoring School at the Kiton headquarters in Arzano, Italy, on April 16th 2014.<br />
<br />
Kiton is a luxury clothing company co-founded in 1956  in Naples by Ciro Paone, a fifth-generation fabric merchant. Launched in 1968, the brand produces suits, overcoats, ties, shirts, trousers, knitwear, outwear, shoes, leather accessories, and bags,  womenswear, fragrances and eyewear. Kiton produces 22,000 men suits per year and their sales proceeds was of 95mln euros.
    CIPG_20140410_INYT_Kiton__M3_6964.jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 10 APRIL 2014: A student sews a blazer buttonhole at the Kiton Tailoring School, at the Kiton headquarters in Arzano, Italy, on April 16th 2014.<br />
<br />
Kiton is a luxury clothing company co-founded in 1956  in Naples by Ciro Paone, a fifth-generation fabric merchant. Launched in 1968, the brand produces suits, overcoats, ties, shirts, trousers, knitwear, outwear, shoes, leather accessories, and bags,  womenswear, fragrances and eyewear. Kiton produces 22,000 men suits per year and their sales proceeds was of 95mln euros.
    CIPG_20140410_INYT_Kiton__M3_6949.jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 10 APRIL 2014: Students are here at work at the Kiton Tailoring School at the Kiton headquarters in Arzano, Italy, on April 16th 2014.<br />
<br />
Kiton is a luxury clothing company co-founded in 1956  in Naples by Ciro Paone, a fifth-generation fabric merchant. Launched in 1968, the brand produces suits, overcoats, ties, shirts, trousers, knitwear, outwear, shoes, leather accessories, and bags,  womenswear, fragrances and eyewear. Kiton produces 22,000 men suits per year and their sales proceeds was of 95mln euros.
    CIPG_20140410_INYT_Kiton__M3_6941.jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 10 APRIL 2014: A tailor and teacher of the Kiton Tailoring School (left) reviews his student's blazer at the Kiton Tailoring School, in the headquarters and factory in Arzano, Italy, on April 16th 2014.<br />
<br />
Kiton is a luxury clothing company co-founded in 1956  in Naples by Ciro Paone, a fifth-generation fabric merchant. Launched in 1968, the brand produces suits, overcoats, ties, shirts, trousers, knitwear, outwear, shoes, leather accessories, and bags,  womenswear, fragrances and eyewear. Kiton produces 22,000 men suits per year and their sales proceeds was of 95mln euros.
    CIPG_20140410_INYT_Kiton__M3_6934.jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 10 APRIL 2014: Fabrics are stored in the women's production unit at the Kiton headquarters and factory in Arzano, Italy, on April 16th 2014.<br />
<br />
Kiton is a luxury clothing company co-founded in 1956  in Naples by Ciro Paone, a fifth-generation fabric merchant. Launched in 1968, the brand produces suits, overcoats, ties, shirts, trousers, knitwear, outwear, shoes, leather accessories, and bags,  womenswear, fragrances and eyewear. Kiton produces 22,000 men suits per year and their sales proceeds was of 95mln euros.
    CIPG_20140410_INYT_Kiton__M3_6910.jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 10 APRIL 2014: A framed icon of Saint Anthony stands on a working table among sewing thread at the Kiton headquarters and factory in Arzano, Italy, on April 16th 2014.<br />
<br />
Kiton is a luxury clothing company co-founded in 1956  in Naples by Ciro Paone, a fifth-generation fabric merchant. Launched in 1968, the brand produces suits, overcoats, ties, shirts, trousers, knitwear, outwear, shoes, leather accessories, and bags,  womenswear, fragrances and eyewear. Kiton produces 22,000 men suits per year and their sales proceeds was of 95mln euros.
    CIPG_20140410_INYT_Kiton__M3_6900.jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 10 APRIL 2014: Blazers hang by a wall personalized by the Kiton tailors and employees with religious icons and prayers, in the men's suit production unit at the Kiton headquarters and factory in Arzano, Italy, on April 16th 2014.<br />
<br />
Kiton is a luxury clothing company co-founded in 1956  in Naples by Ciro Paone, a fifth-generation fabric merchant. Launched in 1968, the brand produces suits, overcoats, ties, shirts, trousers, knitwear, outwear, shoes, leather accessories, and bags,  womenswear, fragrances and eyewear. Kiton produces 22,000 men suits per year and their sales proceeds was of 95mln euros.
    CIPG_20140410_INYT_Kiton__M3_6824.jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 10 APRIL 2014: A tailor works on the buttonholes of a blazer at the men's suit production unit at the Kiton headquarters and factory in Arzano, Italy, on April 16th 2014.<br />
<br />
Kiton is a luxury clothing company co-founded in 1956  in Naples by Ciro Paone, a fifth-generation fabric merchant. Launched in 1968, the brand produces suits, overcoats, ties, shirts, trousers, knitwear, outwear, shoes, leather accessories, and bags,  womenswear, fragrances and eyewear. Kiton produces 22,000 men suits per year and their sales proceeds was of 95mln euros.
    CIPG_20140410_INYT_Kiton__M3_6769.jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 10 APRIL 2014: Interior of the office headquarters of Kitonin Arzano, Italy, on April 16th 2014.<br />
<br />
Kiton is a luxury clothing company co-founded in 1956  in Naples by Ciro Paone, a fifth-generation fabric merchant. Launched in 1968, the brand produces suits, overcoats, ties, shirts, trousers, knitwear, outwear, shoes, leather accessories, and bags,  womenswear, fragrances and eyewear. Kiton produces 22,000 men suits per year and their sales proceeds was of 95mln euros.
    CIPG_20140410_INYT_Kiton__M3_6636.jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 10 APRIL 2014: An employee unrolls a fabric that will be marked and cut at the men's suits production unit at the Kiton headquarters and factory in Arzano, Italy, on April 16th 2014.<br />
<br />
Kiton is a luxury clothing company co-founded in 1956  in Naples by Ciro Paone, a fifth-generation fabric merchant. Launched in 1968, the brand produces suits, overcoats, ties, shirts, trousers, knitwear, outwear, shoes, leather accessories, and bags,  womenswear, fragrances and eyewear. Kiton produces 22,000 men suits per year and their sales proceeds was of 95mln euros.
    CIPG_20140410_INYT_Kiton__M3_6595.jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 10 APRIL 2014: Tailors are here at work in the men's suit production unit at the Kiton headquarters and factory in Arzano, Italy, on April 16th 2014.<br />
<br />
Kiton is a luxury clothing company co-founded in 1956  in Naples by Ciro Paone, a fifth-generation fabric merchant. Launched in 1968, the brand produces suits, overcoats, ties, shirts, trousers, knitwear, outwear, shoes, leather accessories, and bags,  womenswear, fragrances and eyewear. Kiton produces 22,000 men suits per year and their sales proceeds was of 95mln euros.
    CIPG_20140410_INYT_Kiton__M3_6577.jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 10 APRIL 2014: Tailors are here at work in the men's suit production unit at the Kiton headquarters and factory in Arzano, Italy, on April 16th 2014.<br />
<br />
Kiton is a luxury clothing company co-founded in 1956  in Naples by Ciro Paone, a fifth-generation fabric merchant. Launched in 1968, the brand produces suits, overcoats, ties, shirts, trousers, knitwear, outwear, shoes, leather accessories, and bags,  womenswear, fragrances and eyewear. Kiton produces 22,000 men suits per year and their sales proceeds was of 95mln euros.
    CIPG_20140410_INYT_Kiton__M3_6566.jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 10 APRIL 2014: Interior of the office headquarters of Kitonin Arzano, Italy, on April 16th 2014.<br />
<br />
Kiton is a luxury clothing company co-founded in 1956  in Naples by Ciro Paone, a fifth-generation fabric merchant. Launched in 1968, the brand produces suits, overcoats, ties, shirts, trousers, knitwear, outwear, shoes, leather accessories, and bags,  womenswear, fragrances and eyewear. Kiton produces 22,000 men suits per year and their sales proceeds was of 95mln euros.
    CIPG_20140410_INYT_Kiton__M3_6545.jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 10 APRIL 2014: Blazers worked on by students are at the Kiton Tailoring School, at the Kiton headquarters in Arzano, Italy, on April 16th 2014.<br />
<br />
Kiton is a luxury clothing company co-founded in 1956  in Naples by Ciro Paone, a fifth-generation fabric merchant. Launched in 1968, the brand produces suits, overcoats, ties, shirts, trousers, knitwear, outwear, shoes, leather accessories, and bags,  womenswear, fragrances and eyewear. Kiton produces 22,000 men suits per year and their sales proceeds was of 95mln euros.
    CIPG_20140410_INYT_Kiton__M3_6976.jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 10 APRIL 2014: Fabrics are stored in the women's production unit at the Kiton headquarters and factory in Arzano, Italy, on April 16th 2014.<br />
<br />
Kiton is a luxury clothing company co-founded in 1956  in Naples by Ciro Paone, a fifth-generation fabric merchant. Launched in 1968, the brand produces suits, overcoats, ties, shirts, trousers, knitwear, outwear, shoes, leather accessories, and bags,  womenswear, fragrances and eyewear. Kiton produces 22,000 men suits per year and their sales proceeds was of 95mln euros.
    CIPG_20140410_INYT_Kiton__M3_6912.jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 10 APRIL 2014: Tailors are here at work at the men's suit production unit at the Kiton headquarters and factory in Arzano, Italy, on April 16th 2014.<br />
<br />
Kiton is a luxury clothing company co-founded in 1956  in Naples by Ciro Paone, a fifth-generation fabric merchant. Launched in 1968, the brand produces suits, overcoats, ties, shirts, trousers, knitwear, outwear, shoes, leather accessories, and bags,  womenswear, fragrances and eyewear. Kiton produces 22,000 men suits per year and their sales proceeds was of 95mln euros.
    CIPG_20140410_INYT_Kiton__M3_6859.jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 10 APRIL 2014: Tailors mark the fabrics to be cut, under the flags of the Naples soccer team and of Italy, in the men's suit production unit at the Kiton headquarters and factory in Arzano, Italy, on April 16th 2014.<br />
<br />
Kiton is a luxury clothing company co-founded in 1956  in Naples by Ciro Paone, a fifth-generation fabric merchant. Launched in 1968, the brand produces suits, overcoats, ties, shirts, trousers, knitwear, outwear, shoes, leather accessories, and bags,  womenswear, fragrances and eyewear. Kiton produces 22,000 men suits per year and their sales proceeds was of 95mln euros.
    CIPG_20140410_INYT_Kiton__M3_6840.jpg
  • ARZANO, ITALY - 10 APRIL 2014: Fabrics supervisor Luigi Paone stands at the entrance of the Kiton headquarters and factory in Arzano, Italy, on April 16th 2014.<br />
<br />
Kiton is a luxury clothing company co-founded in 1956  in Naples by Ciro Paone, a fifth-generation fabric merchant. Launched in 1968, the brand produces suits, overcoats, ties, shirts, trousers, knitwear, outwear, shoes, leather accessories, and bags,  womenswear, fragrances and eyewear. Kiton produces 22,000 men suits per year and their sales proceeds was of 95mln euros.
    CIPG_20140410_INYT_Kiton__M3_6604.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 10 ARIL 2014: People relax by the panoramic viewpoint at the Capodimonte Park overlooking Naples and the island of Capri, in Naples, Italy, on April 10th 2014.
    CIPG_20140410_INYT_Kiton__M3_7304.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 10 ARIL 2014:  A couple is here at the panoramic viewpoint of the Capodimonte Park overlooking Naples and the island of Capri (right), in Naples, Italy, on April 10th 2014.
    CIPG_20140410_INYT_Kiton__M3_7278.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 10 ARIL 2014: Two women walk towards a panoramics viewpoint at the Capodimonte Park in Naples, Italy, on April 10th 2014.
    CIPG_20140410_INYT_Kiton__M3_7252.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 10 ARIL 2014:  A woman is here at the panoramic viewpoint of the Capodimonte Park overlooking Naples and the island of Capri (right), in Naples, Italy, on April 10th 2014.
    CIPG_20140410_INYT_Kiton__M3_7283.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 10 ARIL 2014: The Capodimonte Park in Naples, Italy, on April 10th 2014.
    CIPG_20140410_INYT_Kiton__M3_7225.jpg
  • 25 June 2012. Palermo, Italy. Carabinieri station commander Ciro Musto is in the garden of the villa of Cosa Nostra boss Salvatore Riina in Palermo, Italy. Cosa Nostra's boss Salvatore Riina's villa in via Bernini, Palermo, was confiscated after his arrest on January 15, 1993 and will host a Caraninieri station. Salvatore Riina lived in the villa during the last years of his absconding ### 25 giugno 2012. Palermo, Italia. Il comandante di stazione Maresciallo Ciro Musto nel giardino del boss di Cosa Nostra Salvatore Riina a Palermo. La villa del boss di Cosa Nostra Salvatore Riina in via Bernini è stata confiscata dopo il suo arresto il 15 gennaio 1993, e ospiterà una stazione dei carabinieri nel 2013. Salvatore Riina ha vissuto nella villa durante gli ultimi anni della sua latitanza.
    OnOff_CIG_2012_06_VillaRiina_D-005.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 13 APRIL 2020: (L-R) Artist and tobacconist Anna Fusco (47) and her husband Ciro Esposito (40) distribute a homemade meal prepared by a volunteer to a homeless man in Naples, Italy, on April 13th 2020. Anna Fusco is the owner of the oldest tobacco shop in the heart of Naples. After the lockdown, as her profits dropped 90%, she noticed homeless people wandering the city centre not knowing where to find food. Together with her husband Ciro and her brother-in-law Vincenzo, she started preparing meals to distribute in front of her tobacco shop. In just a few days, dozens of volunteers took part of the initiative. At the time being, they distribute between 80 and 110 meals per day.<br />
<br />
Southern Italians are facing a war on two fronts. Italy’s coronavirus epidemic, among the deadliest in the world with nearly 20,000 deaths, exploded in the country’s wealthy north, where it stretched one of Europe’s most sophisticated healthcare systems to the limits and shut down the country’s economic engine. But it is the country’s poorer, less developed south that has loomed over the entire crisis and which figured prominently in the government’s decision to lock down all of Italy last month.<br />
<br />
The south is facing economic carnage not seen since the post-war era. The region’s poor, used to scraping by with temporary contracts or off-the-books jobs, are now increasingly dependent on handouts. Scattered, but troubling, reports of unrest at supermarkets puncture the Italian narrative of patriotic sacrifice. And officials are concerned that criminal organizations that have long infiltrated the black market, the health systems and many other facets of southern life are seeking to exploit the crisis by substituting reluctant banks as providers of loans and, in some cases, food.<br />
<br />
The existence of the widespread use off-the-books workers in the South’s vibrant “street economy,” meant that the lockdowns hit hard families that had no access to the government’s t
    CIPG_20200413_NYT_Coronavirus-Naples...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 13 APRIL 2020: (L-R) Artist and tobacconist Anna Fusco (47) and her husband Ciro Esposito (40) distribute a homemade meal prepared by a volunteer to a homeless man in Naples, Italy, on April 13th 2020. Anna Fusco is the owner of the oldest tobacco shop in the heart of Naples. After the lockdown, as her profits dropped 90%, she noticed homeless people wandering the city centre not knowing where to find food. Together with her husband Ciro and her brother-in-law Vincenzo, she started preparing meals to distribute in front of her tobacco shop. In just a few days, dozens of volunteers took part of the initiative. At the time being, they distribute between 80 and 110 meals per day.<br />
<br />
Southern Italians are facing a war on two fronts. Italy’s coronavirus epidemic, among the deadliest in the world with nearly 20,000 deaths, exploded in the country’s wealthy north, where it stretched one of Europe’s most sophisticated healthcare systems to the limits and shut down the country’s economic engine. But it is the country’s poorer, less developed south that has loomed over the entire crisis and which figured prominently in the government’s decision to lock down all of Italy last month.<br />
<br />
The south is facing economic carnage not seen since the post-war era. The region’s poor, used to scraping by with temporary contracts or off-the-books jobs, are now increasingly dependent on handouts. Scattered, but troubling, reports of unrest at supermarkets puncture the Italian narrative of patriotic sacrifice. And officials are concerned that criminal organizations that have long infiltrated the black market, the health systems and many other facets of southern life are seeking to exploit the crisis by substituting reluctant banks as providers of loans and, in some cases, food.<br />
<br />
The existence of the widespread use off-the-books workers in the South’s vibrant “street economy,” meant that the lockdowns hit hard families that had no access to the government’s t
    CIPG_20200413_NYT_Coronavirus-Naples...jpg
  • 25 June 2012. Palermo, Italy. Carabinieri station commander Ciro Musto and officer Giuseppe Montesardo pose next to the safe in the villa of Cosa Nostra boss Salvatore Riina in Palermo, Italy. Cosa Nostra's boss Salvatore Riina's villa in via Bernini, Palermo, was confiscated after his arrest on January 15, 1993 and will host a Caraninieri station. Salvatore Riina lived in the villa during the last years of his absconding ### 25 giugno 2012. Palermo, Italia. Il comandante di stazione Maresciallo Ciro Musto e l'appuntato scelto Giuseppe Montesardo posano accanto alla cassaforte nella villa del boss di Cosa Nostra Salvatore Riina a Palermo. La villa del boss di Cosa Nostra Salvatore Riina in via Bernini è stata confiscata dopo il suo arresto il 15 gennaio 1993, e ospiterà una stazione dei carabinieri nel 2013. Salvatore Riina ha vissuto nella villa durante gli ultimi anni della sua latitanza.
    OnOff_CIG_2012_06_VillaRiina_D-017.jpg
  • 25 June 2012. Palermo, Italy. Carabinieri station commander Ciro Musto enters the armoured room of the villa of Cosa Nostra boss Salvatore Riina in Palermo, Italy. Cosa Nostra's boss Salvatore Riina's villa in via Bernini, Palermo, was confiscated after his arrest on January 15, 1993 and will host a Caraninieri station. Salvatore Riina lived in the villa during the last years of his absconding ### 25 giugno 2012. Palermo, Italia. Il comandante di stazione Maresciallo Ciro Musto entra nella camera blindata nella villa del boss di Cosa Nostra Salvatore Riina a Palermo. La villa del boss di Cosa Nostra Salvatore Riina in via Bernini è stata confiscata dopo il suo arresto il 15 gennaio 1993, e ospiterà una stazione dei carabinieri nel 2013. Salvatore Riina ha vissuto nella villa durante gli ultimi anni della sua latitanza.
    OnOff_CIG_2012_06_VillaRiina_D-012.jpg
  • 25 June 2012. Palermo, Italy. Carabinieri station commander Ciro Musto and officer Giuseppe Montesardo in the first floor of the villa of Cosa Nostra boss Salvatore Riina in Palermo, Italy. Cosa Nostra's boss Salvatore Riina's villa in via Bernini, Palermo, was confiscated after his arrest on January 15, 1993 and will host a Caraninieri station. Salvatore Riina lived in the villa during the last years of his absconding ### 25 giugno 2012. Palermo, Italia. Il comandante di stazione Maresciallo Ciro Musto e l'appuntato scelto Giuseppe Montesardo nel primo piano della villa del boss di Cosa Nostra Salvatore Riina a Palermo. La villa del boss di Cosa Nostra Salvatore Riina in via Bernini è stata confiscata dopo il suo arresto il 15 gennaio 1993, e ospiterà una stazione dei carabinieri nel 2013. Salvatore Riina ha vissuto nella villa durante gli ultimi anni della sua latitanza.
    OnOff_CIG_2012_06_VillaRiina_D-010.jpg
  • 25 June 2012. Palermo, Italy. Carabinieri station commander Ciro Musto and officer Giuseppe Montesardo in the first floor of the villa of Cosa Nostra boss Salvatore Riina in Palermo, Italy. Cosa Nostra's boss Salvatore Riina's villa in via Bernini, Palermo, was confiscated after his arrest on January 15, 1993 and will host a Caraninieri station. Salvatore Riina lived in the villa during the last years of his absconding ### 25 giugno 2012. Palermo, Italia. Il comandante di stazione Maresciallo Ciro Musto e l'appuntato scelto Giuseppe Montesardo nel primo piano della villa del boss di Cosa Nostra Salvatore Riina a Palermo. La villa del boss di Cosa Nostra Salvatore Riina in via Bernini è stata confiscata dopo il suo arresto il 15 gennaio 1993, e ospiterà una stazione dei carabinieri nel 2013. Salvatore Riina ha vissuto nella villa durante gli ultimi anni della sua latitanza.
    OnOff_CIG_2012_06_VillaRiina_D-009.jpg
  • 25 June 2012. Palermo, Italy. Carabinieri station commander Ciro Musto is in the garden of the villa of Cosa Nostra boss Salvatore Riina in Palermo, Italy. Cosa Nostra's boss Salvatore Riina's villa in via Bernini, Palermo, was confiscated after his arrest on January 15, 1993 and will host a Caraninieri station. Salvatore Riina lived in the villa during the last years of his absconding ### 25 giugno 2012. Palermo, Italia. Il comandante di stazione Maresciallo Ciro Musto nel giardino del boss di Cosa Nostra Salvatore Riina a Palermo. La villa del boss di Cosa Nostra Salvatore Riina in via Bernini è stata confiscata dopo il suo arresto il 15 gennaio 1993, e ospiterà una stazione dei carabinieri nel 2013. Salvatore Riina ha vissuto nella villa durante gli ultimi anni della sua latitanza.
    OnOff_CIG_2012_06_VillaRiina_D-004.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 13 APRIL 2020: Artist and tobacconist Anna Fusco (47, center) and her husband Ciro Esposito (40, left) wait for homeless people to come and pick up their daily meals prepared by volunteers in Naples, Italy, on April 13th 2020. Anna Fusco is the owner of the oldest tobacco shop in the heart of Naples. After the lockdown, as her profits dropped 90%, she noticed homeless people wandering the city centre not knowing where to find food. Together with her husband Ciro and her brother-in-law Vincenzo, she started preparing meals to distribute in front of her tobacco shop. In just a few days, dozens of volunteers took part of the initiative. At the time being, they distribute between 80 and 110 meals per day.<br />
<br />
Southern Italians are facing a war on two fronts. Italy’s coronavirus epidemic, among the deadliest in the world with nearly 20,000 deaths, exploded in the country’s wealthy north, where it stretched one of Europe’s most sophisticated healthcare systems to the limits and shut down the country’s economic engine. But it is the country’s poorer, less developed south that has loomed over the entire crisis and which figured prominently in the government’s decision to lock down all of Italy last month.<br />
<br />
The south is facing economic carnage not seen since the post-war era. The region’s poor, used to scraping by with temporary contracts or off-the-books jobs, are now increasingly dependent on handouts. Scattered, but troubling, reports of unrest at supermarkets puncture the Italian narrative of patriotic sacrifice. And officials are concerned that criminal organizations that have long infiltrated the black market, the health systems and many other facets of southern life are seeking to exploit the crisis by substituting reluctant banks as providers of loans and, in some cases, food.<br />
<br />
The existence of the widespread use off-the-books workers in the South’s vibrant “street economy,” meant that the lockdowns hit hard families that had no acces
    CIPG_20200413_NYT_Coronavirus-Naples...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 13 APRIL 2020: (L-R) Artist and tobacconist Anna Fusco (47) and her husband Ciro Esposito (40) wait for homeless people to come and pick up their daily meals prepared by volunteers in Naples, Italy, on April 13th 2020. Anna Fusco is the owner of the oldest tobacco shop in the heart of Naples. After the lockdown, as her profits dropped 90%, she noticed homeless people wandering the city centre not knowing where to find food. Together with her husband Ciro and her brother-in-law Vincenzo, she started preparing meals to distribute in front of her tobacco shop. In just a few days, dozens of volunteers took part of the initiative. At the time being, they distribute between 80 and 110 meals per day.<br />
<br />
Southern Italians are facing a war on two fronts. Italy’s coronavirus epidemic, among the deadliest in the world with nearly 20,000 deaths, exploded in the country’s wealthy north, where it stretched one of Europe’s most sophisticated healthcare systems to the limits and shut down the country’s economic engine. But it is the country’s poorer, less developed south that has loomed over the entire crisis and which figured prominently in the government’s decision to lock down all of Italy last month.<br />
<br />
The south is facing economic carnage not seen since the post-war era. The region’s poor, used to scraping by with temporary contracts or off-the-books jobs, are now increasingly dependent on handouts. Scattered, but troubling, reports of unrest at supermarkets puncture the Italian narrative of patriotic sacrifice. And officials are concerned that criminal organizations that have long infiltrated the black market, the health systems and many other facets of southern life are seeking to exploit the crisis by substituting reluctant banks as providers of loans and, in some cases, food.<br />
<br />
The existence of the widespread use off-the-books workers in the South’s vibrant “street economy,” meant that the lockdowns hit hard families that had no access to the
    CIPG_20200413_NYT_Coronavirus-Naples...jpg
  • GORGONA, ITALY - 27 JUNE 2014: Inmate Ciro Amato (37) cuts cheese during a lunch in Gorgona, Italy, on June 27th 2014. Ciro Amato will be serving a conviction until 2023, for a crime he committed when he was 19 years old. He's been at the Gorgona penitentiary island since September 2013. <br />
<br />
Gorgona is the smallest island of the Tuscan archipelago, located 18 miles west of Livorno, which became an experimental agricultural penal colony in 1869.<br />
<br />
The “Frescobaldi per Gorgona” project  provides inmates the opportunity to learn winemaking techniques and job skills under the supervision of the company’s agronomists and winemakers, led by Vice President Lamberto Frescobaldi himself. Fifty inmates contributed to the production of Gorgona, a white wine made from Vermentino and Ansonica grapes planted on the island of Gorgona in the Tyrrhenian Sea, close to the Tuscan coast. The Frescobaldi family purchased a hectare of old vineyards and will expand with more vineyards in the upcoming months. Total production is only 2,700 bottles, but 1,000 of the bottles will reach the US market through Frescobaldi importer Folio Fine Wine Partners, in the Fall.<br />
<br />
Born in August 2012, the Gorgona initiative was financed by the Department of Penitentiary Administration and accomplished through the collaboration of the Gorgona Penitentiary's Directorate and Marchesi de’ Frescobaldi.
    CIPG_20140627_NYT_Frescobaldi__M3_51...jpg
  • 25 June 2012. Palermo, Italy. Carabinieri station commander Ciro Musto and officer Giuseppe Montesardo pose in the villa of Cosa Nostra boss Salvatore Riina in Palermo, Italy. Cosa Nostra's boss Salvatore Riina's villa in via Bernini, Palermo, was confiscated after his arrest on January 15, 1993 and will host a Caraninieri station. Salvatore Riina lived in the villa during the last years of his absconding ### 25 giugno 2012. Palermo, Italia. Il comandante di stazione Maresciallo Ciro Musto e l'appuntato scelto Giuseppe Montesardo posano accanto nella villa del boss di Cosa Nostra Salvatore Riina a Palermo. La villa del boss di Cosa Nostra Salvatore Riina in via Bernini è stata confiscata dopo il suo arresto il 15 gennaio 1993, e ospiterà una stazione dei carabinieri nel 2013. Salvatore Riina ha vissuto nella villa durante gli ultimi anni della sua latitanza.
    OnOff_CIG_2012_06_VillaRiina_D-018.jpg
  • 25 June 2012. Palermo, Italy. Carabinieri station commander Ciro Musto and officer Giuseppe Montesardo observe a safe in the villa of Cosa Nostra boss Salvatore Riina in Palermo, Italy. Cosa Nostra's boss Salvatore Riina's villa in via Bernini, Palermo, was confiscated after his arrest on January 15, 1993 and will host a Caraninieri station. Salvatore Riina lived in the villa during the last years of his absconding ### 25 giugno 2012. Palermo, Italia. Il comandante di stazione Maresciallo Ciro Musto e l'appuntato scelto Giuseppe Montesardo osservano la cassaforte nella villa del boss di Cosa Nostra Salvatore Riina a Palermo. La villa del boss di Cosa Nostra Salvatore Riina in via Bernini è stata confiscata dopo il suo arresto il 15 gennaio 1993, e ospiterà una stazione dei carabinieri nel 2013. Salvatore Riina ha vissuto nella villa durante gli ultimi anni della sua latitanza.
    OnOff_CIG_2012_06_VillaRiina_D-015.jpg
  • 25 June 2012. Palermo, Italy. Carabinieri station commander Ciro Musto and officer Giuseppe Montesardo observe the walking closet in the villa of Cosa Nostra boss Salvatore Riina in Palermo, Italy. Cosa Nostra's boss Salvatore Riina's villa in via Bernini, Palermo, was confiscated after his arrest on January 15, 1993 and will host a Caraninieri station. Salvatore Riina lived in the villa during the last years of his absconding ### 25 giugno 2012. Palermo, Italia. Il comandante di stazione Maresciallo Ciro Musto e l'appuntato scelto Giuseppe Montesardo osservano la stanza armadio nella villa del boss di Cosa Nostra Salvatore Riina a Palermo. La villa del boss di Cosa Nostra Salvatore Riina in via Bernini è stata confiscata dopo il suo arresto il 15 gennaio 1993, e ospiterà una stazione dei carabinieri nel 2013. Salvatore Riina ha vissuto nella villa durante gli ultimi anni della sua latitanza.
    OnOff_CIG_2012_06_VillaRiina_D-007.jpg
  • 25 June 2012. Palermo, Italy. Carabinieri station commander Ciro Musto and officer Giuseppe Montesardo enter the villa of Cosa Nostra boss Salvatore Riina in Palermo, Italy. Cosa Nostra's boss Salvatore Riina's villa in via Bernini, Palermo, was confiscated after his arrest on January 15, 1993 and will host a Caraninieri station. Salvatore Riina lived in the villa during the last years of his absconding ### 25 giugno 2012. Palermo, Italia. Il comandante di stazione Maresciallo Ciro Musto e l'appuntato scelto Giuseppe Montesardo entrano nella villa del boss di Cosa Nostra Salvatore Riina a Palermo. La villa del boss di Cosa Nostra Salvatore Riina in via Bernini è stata confiscata dopo il suo arresto il 15 gennaio 1993, e ospiterà una stazione dei carabinieri nel 2013. Salvatore Riina ha vissuto nella villa durante gli ultimi anni della sua latitanza.
    OnOff_CIG_2012_06_VillaRiina_D-003.jpg
  • CAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: Housekeeing manager Cristiana Ranaldi (51, foreground) and gardener Ciro Vicedomini (46, background) are seen here at work at the TIberio Palace hotel in Capri before the reopening of the hotel in Capri, Italy, on May 10th 2021. They were both recently vaccinated.<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_A73-07...jpg
  • CETARA, ITALY - 10 March 2014: Ciro Caliendro, a 55 years old peasant, is here in the farmhouse where Antonio Polverino, 64, stores the sausages he makes, in Cetara, a village of fishermans in the Amalfi Coast, Italy, on March 10th 2014.<br />
Antonio Polverino was interviewed by Daniele De Michele, aka Donpasta, a DJ-economist with a passion for gastronomy.
    CIPG_20140310_NYT_DonPasta__M3_1557.jpg
  • CAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: Ciro Vicedomini (46), a gardener at the Tiberio Palace hotel in Capri, is seen here at work before the opening of the hotel in Capri, Italy, on May 10th 2021. He was recently vaccinated.<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_A73-08...jpg
  • CAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: Ciro Vicedomini (46), a gardener at the Tiberio Palace hotel in Capri, is seen here at work before the opening of the hotel in Capri, Italy, on May 10th 2021. He was recently vaccinated.<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_A73-06...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 13 APRIL 2020: (L-R) Artist and tobacconist Anna Fusco (47) waits for homeless people to come and pick up their daily meals prepared by volunteers in Naples, Italy, on April 13th 2020. Anna Fusco is the owner of the oldest tobacco shop in the heart of Naples. After the lockdown, as her profits dropped 90%, she noticed homeless people wandering the city centre not knowing where to find food. Together with her husband Ciro and her brother-in-law Vincenzo, she started preparing meals to distribute in front of her tobacco shop. In just a few days, dozens of volunteers took part of the initiative. At the time being, they distribute between 80 and 110 meals per day.<br />
<br />
Southern Italians are facing a war on two fronts. Italy’s coronavirus epidemic, among the deadliest in the world with nearly 20,000 deaths, exploded in the country’s wealthy north, where it stretched one of Europe’s most sophisticated healthcare systems to the limits and shut down the country’s economic engine. But it is the country’s poorer, less developed south that has loomed over the entire crisis and which figured prominently in the government’s decision to lock down all of Italy last month.<br />
<br />
The south is facing economic carnage not seen since the post-war era. The region’s poor, used to scraping by with temporary contracts or off-the-books jobs, are now increasingly dependent on handouts. Scattered, but troubling, reports of unrest at supermarkets puncture the Italian narrative of patriotic sacrifice. And officials are concerned that criminal organizations that have long infiltrated the black market, the health systems and many other facets of southern life are seeking to exploit the crisis by substituting reluctant banks as providers of loans and, in some cases, food.<br />
<br />
The existence of the widespread use off-the-books workers in the South’s vibrant “street economy,” meant that the lockdowns hit hard families that had no access to the government’s targeted relief pa
    CIPG_20200413_NYT_Coronavirus-Naples...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 6 MARCH 2019: Ciro Scognamiglio, owner of the Poppella pastry shop, poses for a portrait in Naples, Italy, on March 6th 2019.
    CIPG_20190306_CULBACK-Poppella_M3_10...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 6 MARCH 2019: Ciro Scognamiglio, owner of the Poppella pastry shop, poses for a portrait in Naples, Italy, on March 6th 2019.
    CIPG_20190306_CULBACK-Poppella_M3_10...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 6 MARCH 2019: Ciro Scognamiglio, owner of the Poppella pastry shop, poses for a portrait with the fiocchi di neve - his specialty - here at Poppella, a pastry shop in the Sanità district, in Naples, Italy, on March 6th 2019.
    CIPG_20190306_CULBACK-Poppella_M3_10...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 6 MARCH 2019: Ciro Scognamiglio, owner of the Poppella pastry shop, sprinkles sugar over the fiocchi neve - his specialty - here at Poppella, a pastry shop in the Sanità district, in Naples, Italy, on March 6th 2019.
    CIPG_20190306_CULBACK-Poppella_M3_10...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 6 MARCH 2019: Ciro Scognamiglio, owner of the Poppella pastry shop, fills fiocchi neve - his specialty - here at Poppella, a pastry shop in the Sanità district, in Naples, Italy, on March 6th 2019.
    CIPG_20190306_CULBACK-Poppella_M3_09...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 6 MARCH 2019: Ciro Scognamiglio, owner of the Poppella pastry shop, fills fiocchi neve - his specialty - here at Poppella, a pastry shop in the Sanità district, in Naples, Italy, on March 6th 2019.
    CIPG_20190306_CULBACK-Poppella_M3_09...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 20 MARCH 2018: Pizzaiolo Gennaro and baker Ciro are seen at work at the Pizzeria e Trattoria Vigliena in Naples, Italy, on March 20th 2018.<br />
<br />
Pizzeria e Trattoria Vigliena is a restaurant outside of the city center and adjacent to the port. At lunch, the place is packed with workers from the docks and ship owners and workers from the recently built Marina Vigliena.<br />
<br />
The restaurant is owned by Raffaele Esposito, Concetta’s son and the third generation of a family of chefs who founded this restaurant in the middle of the 20th century
    CIPG_20180320_CULBACK_TrattoriaVigli...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: (L-R) Members and Instructors of "Il Tappet o di Iqbal" Carlo Epifani (19), Mattia Formicola (22, top), Pietro Esposito (21, bottom), Ciro Grimaldi (22), Founder and President Giovanni Savino (38), Caterina Spezzaferri (29, top), Chiara Scognamiglio (20, bottom), Michelangelo Ravone (23), Antonio Bosso (25) and Vice-President Marco Riccio (25) pose for a portrait at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 12 DECEMBER 2014: Ciro Pipolo, a 45 years old barista, prepares an espresso coffee at Bar Settebello, a cafe that is part of the "Rete del Caffè Sospeso" (Suspended Coffee Network) in Naples, Italy, on December 12th 2014.<br />
<br />
A caffè sospeso,or suspended coffee, is a cup of coffee paid for in advance as an anonymous act of charity. The tradition began in the working-class cafés of Naples, where someone would order a sospeso, paying the price of two coffees but receiving and consuming only one. A poor person enquiring later whether there was a sospeso available would then be served a coffee for free.
    CIPG_20141212_INYT_SuspendedCoffee__...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 12 DECEMBER 2014: Ciro Pipolo, a 45 years old barista, serves clients at Bar Settebello, a cafè that is part of the "Rete del Caffè Sospeso" (Suspended Coffee Network) in Naples, Italy, on December 12th 2014.<br />
<br />
A caffè sospeso,or suspended coffee, is a cup of coffee paid for in advance as an anonymous act of charity. The tradition began in the working-class cafés of Naples, where someone would order a sospeso, paying the price of two coffees but receiving and consuming only one. A poor person enquiring later whether there was a sospeso available would then be served a coffee for free.
    CIPG_20141212_INYT_SuspendedCoffee__...jpg
  • CETARA, ITALY - 10 March 2014: (L-R) Ciro Caliendro, a 55 years old peasant, and Gianpietro Pinto, a 37 years old local coordinator of Genuino Clandestino, have lunch with local products in the farmhouse of Antonio Polverino, a 64 years old peasant who lives and works in Cetara, a village of fishermans in the Amalfi Coast, Italy, on March 10th 2014.<br />
Antonio Polverino was interviewed by Daniele De Michele, aka Donpasta, a DJ-economist with a passion for gastronomy.
    CIPG_20140310_NYT_DonPasta__M3_2012.jpg
  • CETARA, ITALY - 10 March 2014: Ciro Caliendro (55) add fresh olive oil to a pasta he has just prepared in the farmhouse of Antonio Polverino, a 64 years old peasant living and working  in Cetara, a village of fishermans in the Amalfi Coast, Italy, on March 10th 2014.<br />
Antonio Polverino was interviewed by Daniele De Michele, aka Donpasta, a DJ-economist with a passion for gastronomy.
    CIPG_20140310_NYT_DonPasta__M3_1967.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 12 DECEMBER 2014: Ciro Pipolo, a 45 years old barista, serves an espresso coffee at Bar Settebello, a cafe that is part of the "Rete del Caffè Sospeso" (Suspended Coffee Network) in Naples, Italy, on December 12th 2014.<br />
<br />
A caffè sospeso,or suspended coffee, is a cup of coffee paid for in advance as an anonymous act of charity. The tradition began in the working-class cafés of Naples, where someone would order a sospeso, paying the price of two coffees but receiving and consuming only one. A poor person enquiring later whether there was a sospeso available would then be served a coffee for free.
    CIPG_20141212_INYT_SuspendedCoffee__...jpg