Innovare e prendersi cura (2007)
A continuously evolving hospital seen from two dissimilar perspectives: technological innovation and personal care. The project, created for the Ulss 18, in intended to call up the hospital’s two, complementary souls: technological innovation and ensuring the centrality of the patient.
Parole
che fanno bene (2007)
This book, produced for Doctors With Africa (CUAMM), uses varying tones, themes and languages to tell seemingly different experiences and fragments of knowledge gathered while on the road. With an iconographic approach directed by Enrico Bossan, the diversity of the book’s stories is held together by the banner “health for all", the tacit answer to the hopes of all.
Diversamente solidale (2006)
A book dedicated to the responsibility to protect the freedom of all. Photographer Enrico Bossan and writing Giovanni Boniolo remind us that our generosity, creativity and the need for self expression cannot be subjected to traditional values nor bent by opportunistic calculations whether we are white, black, wealthy, poor or disabled.
I giorni della solidarietà (2006)
This second volume in a series of books on the BNL Telethon is a tribute to two different faces – those of fundraisers and those who will use the funds for research – together maintaining the same optimistic expression.
èAfrica (2003)
This work is the product of a long trip across seven countries: Kenya, Malawi, Mozambique, Rwanda, South Africa, Tanzania and Uganda. Travelling across various cities, suburbs, villages and deserts, Bossan becomes immersed in the ‘road’ to transform the rhetoric and prejudice of the ‘occidental world’ into stories of African life.
Cerchio della salute (2002)
These images narrate a journey to develop a more transparent and intimate healthcare system in Padova, Italy. The essay highlights the emotional sides of the healthcare world, and those medical systems attempting to redefine themselves.
La consapevolezza di un valore. Storie e immagini del lavoro pubblico (2001)
This project, produced collaboratively by the most important Italian photographers for the Presidency of the Council of Ministers, explores different stories of routing daily work to engage the meaning and values behind public service.
Esodo (2000)
This book is a photographic narrative of daily life in a CEIS home for AIDS patients. The eye of the camera focuses discreetly on those places and objects which represent everyday life, in particular on eye-catching faces embodying the disease that brought such pain to life.
Un
privilegio difficile (2000)
Why would someone spend a lifetime working in a difficult medical profession in a remote corner of the earth? Why is bringing healthcare to the dispossessed of the world still a common contemporary commitment? Such questions, and their answers, remain open. The photographic journey of Enrico Bossan, accompanied by an essay by Pietro Veronese, delves deeply into untold stories revealed by the naked reality of everyday life with Doctors With Africa (CUAMM).
Skenes (1998)
Life is a mutation. It evolves and disappears, leaving an indelible trace on our collective memory. Ancient crafts, lost or forgotten, become Skenes, scenes or frames of life reminiscent of the grassroots theatre of '500, in which acts were performed under tents and in the streets and across village squares. The art of each craft comes to life as the authors themselves represent their own work through acting.
Exit (1992)
Exit is a photographic reportage of America by Enrico Bossan and Robero Koch. In two complementary works intended to explore the American dream, Bossan’s “Colors” is a testimony to America’s southern border while Koch immortalized the United States’ northern and central regions in black and white.
Pechino-Parigi (1989)
This collection, in which the words of journalist Guy Mandey are accentuated by Enrico Bossan’s shots along the Peking to Paris path, is of a journey taken in memory of Prince Scipione Borghese’s adventures during the 1907 Peking-Paris raid. The trip brings Bossan’s camera from Peking to Lanzhou, from Xining to the Khunjerab pass, from Palmir to Ararat, from the Black Sea to Moscow and finally back to Paris.