Tommaso Protti: Terra Vermelha
Tommaso Protti: Terra Vermelha
Tommaso Protti: Terra Vermelha
Tommaso Protti: Terra Vermelha
Tommaso Protti: Terra Vermelha
Tommaso Protti: Terra Vermelha
Tommaso Protti: Terra Vermelha
Tommaso Protti: Terra Vermelha
Tommaso Protti: Terra Vermelha
Tommaso Protti: Terra Vermelha
Tommaso Protti: Terra Vermelha
Tommaso Protti: Terra Vermelha
Tommaso Protti: Terra Vermelha
Tommaso Protti: Terra Vermelha
Tommaso Protti: Terra Vermelha
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Tommaso Protti: Terra Vermelha

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The Amazon Rainforest—often referred to as ‘Lungs of our Planet—has long been idealised as a dense, green expanse and a pristine sanctuary inhabited by isolated tribes. Terra Vermelha, the culmination of 10-years’ work by photographer Tommaso Protti, presents an alternative portrait of the region. Depicting fields ablaze, the dark river as a conduit for cocaine trafficking and urban areas plagued by violence—the images in the book depict a dystopia, dispelling such romanticised notions.

“As I sat in my hotel room in Maraba, a city in the Amazon state of Para, Jornal Nacional – Brazil’s flagship news program – transmitted images of the country’s newly elected president, Jair Bolsonaro: “The indigenous in their reservations are like animals in a zoo,” he said. It was November 2018. […] It seemed like a threat, an omen of bad times ahead. I felt that the slow-motion social and environmental breakdown I had seen in the previous years in the Amazon was about to get worse.”

‘Terra Vermelha’, which means ‘red earth’, opens with visions of a paradise lost. Protti’s photographs show rural areas transformed by deforestation, where land conflicts are commonplace between cattle ranchers, landless peasants and environmental activists. The images in the book journey on to urban areas and shantytowns where Protti was given access following police operations to document the rising violence, mainly related to the drug trade. Further photographs show the hold of evangelical religion on the region, the impact of the COVID pandemic, and the construction of new towns and recently expanded cities such as Altamira, famous for both its hydro-power dam and for being Brazil’s murder capital in 2017.

‘Terra Vermelha’, which means ‘red earth’, opens with visions of a paradise lost. Protti’s photographs show rural areas transformed by deforestation, where land conflicts are commonplace between cattle ranchers, landless peasants and environmental activists.

Publisher: Void
Pages: 224
Material: softcover
ISBN: 9786185479008
Categories:
Dimensions: 21 × 27.8 cm