Fine Art Photography (inkjet paper archival pigment print Hahnemühle Photorag)
80.5 x 180 cm
Edition 1/2
[Photo: Courtesy Anne de Carbuccia]
For years Anne de Carbuccia has been traveling through the remotest places on the earth to document sites, animals, and cultures that risk becoming extinct, as well as the evolution of the planet and the impact of human intervention on the environment.
In the series Femminicidio she uses natural and artificial elements to recall a crime against a woman. In Femminicidio 1 the footprints left by a man’s shoes, together with dead leaves and red stains on pure white snow, outline the scene of a crime that has evidently just been committed.
Anne de Carbuccia is a French-American artist who travels across the remotest parts of the earth to document sites, animals, and cultures that risk extinction, in her works. Her images have been displayed in museums and public institutions both in Europe and the United States. Her short film titled One Ocean, presented at the 75th Venice Film Festival, is available in Italian and English in free streaming on One Ocean. To raise awareness about the climate emergency and the threat to the planet caused by human behavior, de Carbuccia founded the Time Shrine Foundation in the United States, and the Associazione One Planet One Future in Italy. She is currently making a documentary about the challenges of the “Anthropocene” that will be released in 2021 De Carbuccia compensates her carbon footprint with MyClimate.