Luigi Vagamo
Italy | B. 1984
Luigi Vagamo is an astrophotographer, conservation photographer, and documentarian whose work explores humanity’s connection to nature and the universe. His work has been featured by National Geographic, NASA, and the European Space Agency, among others. In 2025 he was named among the World's Top 100 Astrophotographers by 35Awards.
His signature project, 'ODE TO THE GLACIERS', documents the fragile beauty of glaciers, highlighting the urgent need for climate action. Launched in January 2025, it received an international photography award from UNESCO and other leading environmental organizations. The project is now expanding globally with new collaborations, glacier expeditions, and recent exhibitions in France, Portugal, and Kazakhstan.
A science communicator at heart, he advocates for environmental conservation and dark sky preservation through compelling visuals and engaging talks. A member of the NPPA, his photography work is grounded in formal training and professional experience in climate science and policy, bridging storytelling and environmental advocacy.
Combining astrophotography, science, and storytelling, Luigi crafts visual narratives that inspire awareness and positive change. He believes that "By looking up at the stars, we gain the perspective to care for the world beneath our feet."
CREDENTIALS
International Photography Award, World’s Top 100 Astrophotographers, 35Awards
International Photography Award, UNESCO/Onewater/MPB/ADB/IDB/Burghausen
2024
Feature, NASA Astronomy Picture of the Day, NASA, Washington DC, USA
2023
International Photography Award, What’s In The Night Sky, Onlin
Ragusa Foto Festival, Ragusa Ibla, Italy
In Colors Project ED#3 JOY, Lumicroma, Portugal
UN Glaciers Summit, UNESCO Headquarters, Paris, France
International Year of Glaciers’ Preservation, Kasteev State Museum of Arts, Almaty, Kazakhstan
Publication, European Space Agency, Paris, France
Publication, European Space Agency, Earth Observation Program, Rome, Italy
Publication, National Geographic Traveler, Mexico City, México
Feature, NASA Astronomy Picture of the Day, NASA, Washington DC, USA.
2024
Feature, NASA Astronomy Picture of the Day, NASA, Washington DC, USA
Related Exhibitions
IN COLORS PROJECT ED#1 REACT!
The broadness to which ... Ler Mais
The broadness to which the theme is open is represented in this set of 50 artworks by photographers from 22 nationalities. React! to what, from what perspective? The possibility of endless interpretations is mirrored in an exhibition in which the reaction is as much in the photographed "scene" itself as in the impression of the person who photographed it, and also, and always, in the eye of the person who appreciates the photograph. In this realm, there is the image of time and place, of many places and many qualities of time. There is the beauty of moments, spaces, cultures and traditions. There is a whole scale of emotions. There is the poetry of landscapes and the destruction wrought by war. There is fantasy in improbable scenarios. There are global concerns, personal instances. Sometimes the weight of existence; sometimes the lightness of laughter in the face of death. There remains, still, the certainty of a kaleidoscopic world, in permanent change, so that stories repeat themselves. Because man repeats himself. The continuity of life is also maintained. It is in the faces of many. It is in the colors. It is in the light of black and white. It is in the instinct. In the will. In what is lost, in what is conquered.
Curated by Sandra Maria Teixeira
IN COLORS PROJECT – a borderless initiative by Lumicroma – reclaims the relevance of photography as a sociocultural record and artistic intervention. Through the convergence of experiences reflecting on the current world and through photographic creation, it aims to annually trace the grand image of the time in which we live. Ler Menos
IN COLORS PROJECT ED#2 HOME
In 74 photographs, 32 authors from 14 nationalities give us the most poignant portrait of what we are, what we do and what we are failing at. Because HOME has smiles and exposed wounds. It shows a sense of belonging and an absurd lack of ground.
It is the human cloak of a thousand patches to which we all belong.
This is our Home. And we can't close our eyes.
Curated by Sandra Maria Teixeira
IN COLORS PROJECT – a borderless initiative by Lumicroma – reclaims the relevance of photography as a sociocultural record and artistic intervention. Through the convergence of experiences reflecting on the current world and through photographic creation, it aims to annually trace the grand image of the time in which we live. Ler Menos
AUSCHWITZ: TRACE(S) OF A LEGACY
To keep the memory alive appeals to reflection and to vigilanc ... Ler Mais
To keep the memory alive appeals to reflection and to vigilance and encourages the commitment of future generations, so that, through these, the voices of the survivors, which will soon no longer be heard, can echoe.
We know the history, we have seen the films and we have read the books. We have always been told that Auschwitz is the true symbol of Holocaust, since more than one million jews were murdered there. A factory of killing people! Gypsies, ho-mossexuals, Jehovah's Witnesses and political dissidents also suffered in this dark place.
We have read about the hideous experiments carried out by Mengele in Auschwitz. We have seen photographies of the survivors, of the corpses, of the crematoriums, of the abandoned personal belongings. We started our journey to Poland with the thought that we would be prepared to face the interpretative centre of the Holocaust and, through it, find the answer to our restlessness: how could this have been humanly possible?
During the journey, we revisited those with whom we had previously shared the feeling of the concentration camp. All the pages, testimonies and faces remained well alive in our memories.
We have arrived, the presence in Auschwitz overwhelms us!
No memory, read, studied, seen or heard can be compared to standing right there. In the deafening silence of that place, which carries within itself the imense loss of human sense, the question of Theodor Adorno gains strenght: How can poetry be possible after Auschwitz Ler Menos
COURA'S PARADISE
Alfredo Cunha's eye, attentive and sharp, documents this magic, this spirit of brotherhood, this collective happiness. The joy of the audience and the euphoria of the bands, who never forget th ... Ler Mais
Alfredo Cunha's eye, attentive and sharp, documents this magic, this spirit of brotherhood, this collective happiness. The joy of the audience and the euphoria of the bands, who never forget that breathtaking human wall and the generous way they are received. It captures the sweetness, the serenity, the deepest peace, the shared love, the respect, the amazement, the unique energy of the Taboão river, contrasted with the exaltation, the apotheosis, the celebration and the joy, that sacred emotion that Almada Negreiros once said was "the most serious thing in life".
Year after year, we need the Paredes de Coura Festival to recharge the batteries of passion, to dispel the mediocrity of the grayest days, to cure the diseases of the sadness that makes us pale and to chase away the city carrion that burrows into our bones. To fill ourselves with beauty, euphoria and the deepest peace, in divine communion with nature. On pilgrimage, in a perpetual return to magic.
Curated by Sandra Maria Teixeira
IN COLORS PROJECT ED#3 JOY
Photography, as a device for representation and mediation, emerges as a territory for ideological, aesthetic, and poetic experimentation. The selected images map out visual strate- gies through which different cultures are encoded, ritualized, and transmitted. Encompassing a range of representational expressions – from collective celebration to intimate contemplation – each author presents a singular visual lexicon, revealing joy as a socio-anthropological and aesthetic praxis, while envisioning the creation of possible futures.
The curatorial approach is structured around the hypothesis that the photographic image constitutes a device for reconfiguring sensibility, for analyzing and interpreting reality, transfigured and appropriated into autonomous and individual realities, prompting us to question the conditions of possibility for pleasure, encounter, and transformation in contemporary societies.
Curated by Aníbal Lemos and Sandra Maria Teixeira
IN COLORS PROJECT – a borderless initiative by Lumicroma – reclaims the relevance of photography as a sociocultural record and artistic intervention. Through the convergence of experiences reflecting on the current world and through photographic creation, it aims to annually trace the grand image of the time in which we live. Ler Menos