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Sebastiao Salgado traveled the Brazilian Amazon and photographed
the unparalleled beauty of this extraordinary region for six years:
the forest, the rivers, the mountains, the people who live there-an
irreplaceable treasure of humanity. In the book's foreword Salgado
writes: "For me, it is the last frontier, a mysterious universe of
its own, where the immense power of nature can be felt as nowhere
else on earth. Here is a forest stretching to infinity that
contains one-tenth of all living plant and animal species, the
world's largest single natural laboratory." Salgado visited a dozen
indigenous tribes that exist in small communities scattered across
the largest tropical rainforest in the world. He documented the
daily life of the Yanomami, the Ashaninka, the Yawanawa, the
Suruwaha, the Zo'e, the Kuikuro, the Waura, the Kamayura, the
Korubo, the Marubo, the Awa, and the Macuxi-their warm family
bonds, their hunting and fishing, the manner in which they prepare
and share meals, their marvelous talent for painting their faces
and bodies, the significance of their shamans, and their dances and
rituals. Sebastiao Salgado has dedicated this book to the
indigenous peoples of Brazil's Amazon region: "My wish, with all my
heart, with all my energy, with all the passion I possess, is that
in 50 years' time this book will not resemble a record of a lost
world. Amazonia must live on." INSTITUTO TERRA Founded in 1998 at
Aimores in the state of Minas Gerais, Instituto Terra is the
culmination of Lelia Wanick Salgado and Sebastiao Salgado's
lifelong activism and work as cultural documentarians. Through a
scientific program of planting and raising saplings, the
organization has performed a miraculous reforestation of the once
infertile region and furthered the Salgados' mission of reversing
the damage done to our planet. TASCHEN is proud to reach carbon
zero status through our continued partnership. Also available in a
Collector's Edition and four Art Editions, each with a signed
silver gelatin print, all with a book stand designed by Renzo
Piano.
""In "Genesis," my camera allowed nature to speak to me. And it was
my privilege to listen."" --Sebastiao Salgado
On a very fortuitous day in 1970, 26-year-old Sebastiao Salgado
held a camera for the first time. When he looked through the
viewfinder, he experienced a revelation: suddenly life made sense.
From that day onward--though it took years of hard work before he
had the experience to earn his living as a photographer--the camera
became his tool for interacting with the world. Salgado, who
"always preferred the chiaroscuro palette of black-and-white
images," shot very little color in his early career before giving
it up completely.
Raised on a farm in Brazil, Salgado possessed a deep love and
respect for nature; he was also particularly sensitive to the ways
in which human beings are affected by their often devastating
socio-economic conditions. Of the myriad works Salgado has produced
in his acclaimed career, three long-term projects stand out:
"Workers"(1993), documenting the vanishing way of life of manual
laborers across the world, "Migrations"(2000), a tribute to mass
migration driven by hunger, natural disasters, environmental
degradation and demographic pressure, and this new opus, "Genesis,"
the result of an epic eight-year expedition to rediscover the
mountains, deserts and oceans, the animals and peoples that have so
far escaped the imprint of modern society--the land and life of a
still-pristine planet. "Some 46% of the planet is still as it was
in the time of genesis," Salgado reminds us. "We must preserve what
exists." The "Genesis" project, along with the Salgados' Instituto
Terra, are dedicated to showing the beauty of our planet, reversing
the damage done to it, and preserving it for the future.
Over 30 trips--travelled by foot, light aircraft, seagoing
vessels, canoes, and even balloons, through extreme heat and cold
and in sometimes dangerous conditions--Salgado created a collection
of images showing us nature, animals, and indigenous peoples in
breathtaking beauty. Mastering the monochrome with an extreme
deftness to rival the virtuoso Ansel Adams, Salgado brings
black-and-white photography to a new dimension; the tonal
variations in his works, the contrasts of light and dark, recall
the works of Old Masters such as Rembrandt and Georges de La Tour.
What does one discover in "Genesis"? The animal species and
volcanoes of the Galapagos; penguins, sea lions, cormorants, and
whales of the Antarctic and South Atlantic; Brazilian alligators
and jaguars; African lions, leopards, and elephants; the isolated
Zo'e tribe deep in the Amazon jungle; the Stone Age Korowai people
of West Papua; nomadic Dinka cattle farmers in Sudan; Nenet nomads
and their reindeer herds in the Arctic Circle; Mentawai jungle
communities on islands west of Sumatra; the icebergs of the
Antarctic; the volcanoes of Central Africa and the Kamchatka
Peninsula; Saharan deserts; the Negro and Jurua rivers in the
Amazon; the ravines of the Grand Canyon; the glaciers of Alaska...
and beyond. Having dedicated so much time, energy, and passion to
the making of this work, Salgado likens "Genesis" to "my love
letter to the planet."
Whereas the limited Collector's Edition is conceived like a
large-format portfolio that meanders across the planet, this
unlimited book presents a selection of photographs arranged in five
chapters geographically: Planet South, Sanctuaries, Africa,
Northern Spaces, Amazonia and Pantanal.
Each in its own way, this book and the Collector's edition--both
edited and designed by Lelia Wanick Salgado--pay homage to
Salgado's triumphant and unparalleled "Genesis" project.
The world premiere of "Sebastiao Salgado: Genesis "will open at the
Natural History Museum in London on April 11, 2013. The exhibition
builds on the Museum's reputation as the home of the planet's best
nature photography. For further information and to book tickets
please go to www.nhm.ac.uk/salgado. Additionally, from May 14th, a
special portfolio of plantinum prints from "Genesis" will be shown
at Phillips Howick Place gallery in London.
Worldwide venues for the "Genesis" exhibition: The Natural History
Museum, London, UK - April 11 through September 8, 2013 The Royal
Ontario Museum, Toronto, Canada - May 2 through September 2, 2013
Ara Pacis Museum, Rome, Italy - May 15 through September 15, 2013
Jardim Botanico, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil - May 28 through August
25, 2013 Musee de l'Elysee, Lausanne, Switzerland - September 21,
2013 through January 12, 2014 La Maison Europeenne de la
Photographie (MEP), Paris, France - September 25, 2013 through
January 5, 2014 SESC Belenzinho, Sao Paulo, SP, Brazil - September
9 - November 2013
"What is it about a dull yellow metal that drives men to abandon
their homes, sell their belongings and cross a continent in order
to risk life, limbs and sanity for a dream?" - Sebastiao Salgado
When Sebastiao Salgado was finally authorized to visit Serra Pelada
in September 1986, having been blocked for six years by Brazil's
military authorities, he was ill-prepared to take in the
extraordinary spectacle that awaited him on this remote hilltop on
the edge of the Amazon rainforest. Before him opened a vast hole,
some 200 meters wide and deep, teeming with tens of thousands of
barely-clothed men. Half of them carried sacks weighing up to 40
kilograms up wooden ladders, the others leaping down muddy slopes
back into the cavernous maw. Their bodies and faces were the color
of ochre, stained by the iron ore in the earth they had excavated.
After gold was discovered in one of its streams in 1979, Serra
Pelada evoked the long-promised El Dorado as the world's largest
open-air gold mine, employing some 50,000 diggers in appalling
conditions. Today, Brazil's wildest gold rush is merely the stuff
of legend, kept alive by a few happy memories, many pained
regrets-and Sebastiao Salgado's photographs. Color dominated the
glossy pages of magazines when Salgado shot these images. Black and
white was a risky path, but the Serra Pelada portfolio would mark a
return to the grace of monochrome photography, following a
tradition whose masters, from Edward Weston and Brassai to Robert
Capa and Henri Cartier-Bresson, had defined the early and mid-20th
century. When Salgado's images reached The New York Times Magazine,
something extraordinary happened: there was complete silence. "In
my entire career at The New York Times," recalled photo editor
Peter Howe, "I never saw editors react to any set of pictures as
they did to Serra Pelada." Today, with photography absorbed by the
art world and digital manipulation, Salgado's portfolio holds a
biblical quality and projects an immediacy that makes them vividly
contemporary. The mine at Serra Pelada has been long closed, yet
the intense drama of the gold rush leaps out of these images. This
book gathers Salgado's complete Serra Pelada portfolio in
museum-quality reproductions, accompanied by a foreword by the
photographer and an essay by Alan Riding. Also available in a
signed and limited Collector's Edition and as an Art Edition.
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Sahel - The End of the Road (Hardcover)
Sebastiao Salgado; Foreword by Orville Schell; Introduction by Fred Ritchin; Afterword by Eduardo Galeano; Designed by Lelia Wanick Salgado
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R1,344
Discovery Miles 13 440
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In 1984 Sebastiao Salgado began what would be a fifteen-month
project of photographing the drought-stricken Sahel region of
Africa in the countries of Chad, Ethiopia, Mali, and Sudan, where
approximately one million people died from extreme malnutrition and
related causes. Working with the humanitarian organization Doctors
Without Borders, Salgado documented the enormous suffering and the
great dignity of the refugees. This early work became a template
for his future photographic projects about other afflicted people
around the world. Since then, Salgado has again and again sought to
give visual voice to those millions of human beings who, because of
military conflict, poverty, famine, overpopulation, pestilence,
environmental degradation, and other forms of catastrophe, teeter
on the edge of survival. Beautifully produced, with thoughtful
supporting narratives by Orville Schell, Fred Ritchin, and Eduardo
Galeano, this first U.S. edition brings some of Salgado's earliest
and most important work to an American audience for the first time.
Twenty years after the photographs were taken, "Sahel: The End of
the Road" is still painfully relevant. Born in Brazil in 1944,
Sebastiao Salgado studied economics in Sao Paulo and Paris and
worked in Brazil and England. While traveling as an economist to
Africa, he began photographing the people he encountered. Working
entirely in a black-and-white format, Salgado highlights the larger
meaning of what is happening to his subjects with an imagery that
testifies to the fundamental dignity of all humanity while
simultaneously protesting its violation by war, poverty, and other
injustices. 'The planet remains divided,' Salgado explains. 'The
first world in a crisis of excess, the third world in a crisis of
need.' This disparity between the haves and the have-nots is the
subtext of almost all of Salgado's work.
"We must remember that in the brutality of battle another such
apocalypse is always just around the corner." -Sebastiao Salgado In
January and February 1991, as the United States-led coalition drove
Iraqi forces out of Kuwait, Saddam Hussein's troops retaliated with
an inferno. At some 700 oil wells and an unspecified number of
oil-filled low-lying areas they ignited vast, raging fires,
creating one of the worst environmental disasters in living memory.
As the desperate efforts to contain and extinguish the
conflagration progressed, Sebastiao Salgado traveled to Kuwait to
witness the crisis firsthand. The conditions were excruciating. The
heat was so vicious that Salgado's smallest lens warped. A
journalist and another photographer were killed when a slick
ignited as they crossed it. Sticking close to the firefighters, and
with characteristic sensitivity to both human and environmental
impact, Salgado captured the terrifying scale of this "huge theater
the size of the planet": the ravaged landscape; the sweltering
temperatures; the air choking on charred sand and soot; the
blistered remains of camels; the sand still littered with cluster
bombs; and the flames and smoke soaring to the skies, blocking out
the sunlight, dwarfing the oil-coated firefighters. Salgado's epic
pictures first appeared in the New York Times Magazine in June 1991
and were subsequently awarded the Oskar Barnack Award, recognizing
outstanding images on the relationship between man and the
environment. Kuwait: A Desert on Fire is the first monograph of
this astonishing series. Like Genesis, Exodus, and The Children, it
is as much a major document of modern history as an extraordinary
body of photographic work.
Eye on Africa: Thirty years of Africa images, selected by Salgado
himself Sebasti?o Salgado is one the most respected
photojournalists working today, his reputation forged by decades of
dedication and powerful black and white images of dispossessed and
distressed people taken in places where most wouldn?t dare to go.
Although he has photographed throughout South America and around
the globe, his work most heavily concentrates on Africa, where he
has shot more than 40 reportage works over a period of 30 years.
From the Dinka tribes in Sudan and the Himba in Namibia to gorillas
and volcanoes in the lakes region to displaced peoples throughout
the continent, Salgado shows us all facets of African life today.
Whether he's documenting refugees or vast landscapes, Salgado knows
exactly how to grab the essence of a moment so that when one sees
his images one is involuntarily drawn into them. His images
artfully teach us the disastrous effects of war, poverty, disease,
and hostile climatic conditions. This book brings together
Salgado's photos of Africa in three parts. The first concentrates
on the southern part of the continent (Mozambique, Malawi, Angola,
Zimbabwe, South Africa, Namibia), the second on the Great Lakes
region (Congo, Rwanda, Burundi, Uganda, Tanzania, Kenya), and the
third on the Sub-Saharan region (Burkina Faso, Mali, Sudan,
Somalia, Chad, Mauritania, Senegal, Ethiopia). Texts are provided
by renowned Mozambique novelist Mia Couto, who describes how
today's Africa reflects the effects of colonization as well as the
consequences of economic, social, and environmental crises. This
stunning book is not only a sweeping document of Africa but an
homage to the continent's history, people, and natural phenomena.
Art Edition E- No. 401-500"The Arctic National Wildlife Refuge,
Alaska, USA, "2009Gelatin silver print40 x 30 cm (16 x 12 in.)
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