Books

Celebrating 500 Years of Beretta

Amid the waning days of the Italian Renaissance in the sixteenth century, Bartolomeo Beretta forged the first of the guns that would bear his name—elegant firearms that have since starred in James Bond movies, at the Olympic Games, and on dove fields and sporting clays courses across the South. These days, the historic brand is as popular with outdoorsmen as ever. In a handsome new book, Beretta: 500 Years of the World’s Finest Sporting Life (available October 25), writer Nicholas Foulkes and photographer Andy Anderson, a G&G contributor, tell the story of how the family-owned company built that international reputation from its humble beginnings in iron-rich northern Italy.

The coffee-table tome starts there, at Beretta’s headquarters in Gardone Val Trompia. Foulkes and Anderson then traveled the world for two-and-a-half years, chronicling the guns in action—from a driven hunt in Scotland to a dove shoot in Argentina to the sporting clays course at Blackberry Farm in Walland, Tennessee. “Beretta sent us out to these spots, and then they let us document them however we wanted,” Anderson says. “I spent four or five days in each place getting all the shots I needed.” That freedom triggered a rich array of images. Depictions of adventure stories and sweeping landscapes alternate with up-close shots of vintage weaponry and elaborate engravings to create a portrait of a sporting tradition that’s the next best thing to being in the field yourself.

View as Slideshow

This new coffee-table book, available October 25, features the work of G&G contributor Andy Anderson

The family’s hunting dogs roam Villa Beretta and its gardens, in Gardone Val Trompia, Italy.

Andy Anderson

The finely engraved receiver of a Beretta SO10 shotgun.

Andy Anderson

The forge in the Beretta factory evokes five hundred year of gun-making.

Andy Anderson

One of Beretta’s craftsmen at work.

Andy Anderson

Beretta’s master engravers spend 300 hours or more on artistic flourishes such as the ones seen here on this SO10 EELL.

Andy Anderson

Retriever and hunter in the Louisiana marsh.

Andy Anderson

The sporting tradition is alive and well in Scotland.

Andy Anderson

Dogs and hunter in choreography honed by training, instinct, and mutual respect.

Andy Anderson