
While the book acknowledges the history of exploitation, enslavement and cultural intermixing, Berti also describes the story of the Boggianos as one of fighting for freedom from slavery. Berti points out that the highlight of his research was finding escribanos or books of the notaries that preserved the deeds of Boggiano’s slaves who purchased their freedom.
The book is a result of Berti’s five years of historical research. “Boggiano Heirs” is part of a larger project titled “Futile Cycles: Boggiano” which includes two other works developed by the author. The first is a wall installation depicting two large family trees and a video that weaves together stories collected in the area where Boggiano’s coffee plantation was. The second are conversations between a family of Afro Cuban Boggianos. The video was screened at the National Museum of Fine Arts in Havana, Cuba in March 2023. The installation will be available to the public in 2024.
Due to its historical and artistic relevance at an international level, the book gained the support of the Italian Council program operated by the Italian Contemporary Creativity Directorate General of the Ministry of Culture, which aims to promote the production, knowledge and dissemination of contemporary Italian creation in the field of visual arts.
To purchase “Boggiano Heirs” click here.
Update
Since this publication Berti has created and exhibited one of the two Cuban Boggianos family tree. It is the tree of the “Descendants of Rosa, Francisco and Liberata Boggiano.” The tree is a complex of frames which contains photographs and paper material and has connecting elements in enameled resin.
The installation is 3.5 meters high and over 17 meters wide and is currently on display until the end of September at Guido Costa Project, a contemporary art gallery located in Turin, Italy.










