Italian photographer Gabriele
Galimberti is always traveling the world in search of adventure, good
stories, and interesting people. For his latest project entitled “Toy
Stories”, Galimberti photographed children from around the world
with their most prized possession. He did not expect to uncover much
we did not already know. “At their age, they are pretty all much
the same,” is his conclusion after 18 months working on the
project. “They just want to play.”
But it’s how they play that seemed to
differ from country to country. Galimberti found that children in
richer countries were more possessive with their toys. “At the
beginning, they wouldn’t want me to touch their toys, and I would
need more time before they would let me play with them,” says the
Italian photographer. “In poor countries, it was much easier. Even
if they only had two or three toys, they didn’t really care. In
Africa, the kids would mostly play with their friends outside.”
However, there are many similarities in
which the kids regard their toys, especially when it comes to their
function. Galimberti met a six-year-old boy in Texas and a
four-year-old girl in Malawi who both maintained their plastic
dinosaurs would protect them from the dangers that await them at
night. More common was how the toys reflected the world each child
was born into - the girl from an affluent Mumbai family loves
Monopoly, because she likes the idea of building houses and hotels,
while the boy from rural Mexico loves trucks, because he sees them
rumbling through his village to the nearby sugar plantation every
day. A Lativian kid plays with miniature cars because his mother
drove a taxi, while the daughter of an Italian farmer has an
assortment of plastic rakes, hoes and spades.
Working for Toy Stories, Galimberti
learned as much about the parents as he learned about the children.
Parents from the Middle East and Asia, he found, would push their
children to be photographed even if they were initially nervous or
upset, while South American parents were “really relaxed, and said
I could do whatever I wanted as long as their child didn’t mind”.
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Watcharapom - Bangkok, Thailand |
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Stella - Montecchio, Italy | |
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Ralf - Riga, Latvia | | |
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Botlhe - Maun, Botswana | | |
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Orly - Brownsville, Texas |
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Noel - Dallas, Texas |
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Maudy - Kalulushi, Zambia |
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Li Yi Chen - Shenyang, China |
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Chiwa - Mchinji, Malawi | | |
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Davide - La Valletta, Malta |
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Cun Zi Yi - Chongqing, China |
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Arafa & Aisha - Bububu, Zanzibar |
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Jaqueline - Manila, Philippines | |
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Tyra - Stockholm, Sweden |
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