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THE AMERIGUNS – GABRIELE GALIMBERTI
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Stephen F. Wagner (66 years old) – State College, Pennsylvania Until the age of 50, Stephen just wished. He dreamed, assessed, studied history and models. He’s been fascinated with guns since childhood. When he was 8, his grandfather put a revolver in his hand and explained the basics. Decades later, Stephen would use that same handgun to teach his own children to shoot. It was a Smith & Wesson, and today it still holds a place of honour in the collection he’s spent the last 15 years building, starting when he left his job as a FedEx delivery man to go to work part time in a gun shop and also as an NRA-certified shooting instructor. Since then, Stephen has collected about 70 firearms. He favours rare and antique pieces. “I’m fascinated by the idea of being a part of history through the guns I own,” he explains. Those that date from the Spanish-American War are among the most valuable, but he is particularly proud of his American-made firearms and his collection of pieces from the 1970s. “I keep on buying them. They’re a good investment and they’ll be a marvelous legacy to pass on to my children.”Every one of his guns has been used at least once. However, as is true of any collection worthy of the name, the joy comes from ownership. “We Americans are very lucky. It’s wonderful to have a bond of this sort with our country.”I think that revolvers are the quintessence of this nation.As an American citizen, I feel very fortunate to live in a country where we have the freedom to own firearms. Most prized piece: my 4-inch Colt Python. I wanted one for years and the price kept going up, and then last year I bought it. I've only used it once and I don't know that I’ll shoot with it again.
Skinnerboox (e Dewi Lewis), 2020 Hardback, 22×27 cm 136 pages, color and black and white photographs Italian and English
Of all the guns in the world owned by private citizens for non-military purposes, half are found in the United States of America. Their amount exceed the population of the country: 393 million guns for 372 million people.
It is not a coincidence, nor a marketing matter: it is rather a matter of tradition and constitutional guarantee. It is the story of the Second Amendment, ratified in 1791 to reassure the inhabitants of the new independent territories that their federal government will never be able to abuse its authority over them.
Two hundred and fifty years later, the Second Amendment is still rooted in all aspects of American life and this book frames its current state through what are seen as four fundamental American values: Family, Freedom, Passion, Style.