Saturday 22 November 2014

Sebastiao Salgado's Genesis Exhibition and the Terra Firma project

There is always something you regret not doing or not acquiring on  a trip. In this instance it was a signed copy of the book Genesis by the legendary photographer Sebastiao Salgado. I have had to buy my own unsigned copy. Sigh....The book and exhibition Genesis is the culmination of eight years of work. Genesis is the third long-term series on global issues by world-renowned photographer SebastiĆ£o Salgado, following Workers (1993) and Migrations (2000). The exhibition draws together more than 200 spectacular black-and-white photographs of wildlife, landscapes, seascapes, and indigenous peoples—raising public awareness about the pressing issues of environment and climate change. The exhibition at the International Centre for Photography in NYC is an overwhelming  experience as most of his exhibitions are. This though was a major break in the tradition of work that Salgado has produced since first picking up a camera at the age of 26. He has photographed much of what is bleak about humanity.




"You have to understand that he came to the end of something. He came to the heart of darkness; the hell had really gotten to him and I don't think he was able to live. He may not have found the way out of it if it hadn't been for his new encounter with nature. It was a redemption. Planting rainforest, reanimating dead ground, pulled him out of the terrible hole he was in and he reinvented himself as well as his photography."

The works on display are images made across all the continents and celebrate the almost 50 percent of the world still untrammelled by human intervention. You cannot but be impressed by the extraordinary diversity of our planet and of course the need for us to be part of maintenance of this remarkable place we live on. Selgado is an inspiration as a photographer and more importantly as a humanist aware of the bonds we have to our planet. It is interesting in this time of rapid centralisation into cities and the city as the major creator of ideas due to the density of people. But this idea of us living cheek by jowl in cities separates us from much of the planet we inhabit and also the environmental cost of mass consumption. I am of course as happy as the next person to be surrounded and to wear beautiful things made by the most creative of us, but we do need to enquire as to the sustainability of our desires. 


The Terra Firma project started when Sebastiao took over his parents ranch in Brazil. It had been increasingly deforested and in his lifetime most of the animals had deserted the property. In this inspirational project he set about creating a natural wonder by reforesting the ranch. The results are simply amazing and for the optimists among us show what is possible. In a remarkably short time the barren, featureless, overworked land has become an ecosystem abundant in plant and animal life.

The documentary by Wim Wenders and Sebastiao's son Juliano on his work "the Salt of the Earth" is a wonderful introduction to his photography and philosophy on photography and our planet. 


I have been fortunate to have seen Salgado's work for decades and his involvement in the extraordinary Magnum Photography agency. Anyone with the slightest interest in photography should acquaint themselves with this group of the most talented and tenacious photographers. Their work is beyond superlatives.





We are indeed standing on the shoulders of giants. Listen to Sebastiao Salgado's TED talk. 


It is interesting in this time of political deniability of our responsibility to pass onto future generations some unspoilt nature. Visiting the Natural History Museum in NYC recently I was taken by Theodore Roosevelt's passion for the preserving of our natural heritage. He signed off on the creation of 5 National parks and 150 National Forest areas. 

“To waste, to destroy our natural resources, to skin and exhaust the land instead of using it so as to increase its usefulness, will result in undermining in the days of our children the very prosperity which we ought by right to hand down to them amplified and developed.”
Theodore Roosevelt


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