SINGAPORE.- The awe-inspiring beauty and untamed majesty of the Amazon comes to life in Amazônia, an extraordinary photographic odyssey by internationally acclaimed Brazilian photographer Sebastião Salgado. This travelling exhibition transports visitors into the heart of one of the worlds greatest ecosystems.
Dive into Sebastião Salgados breathtaking journey through the Amazon rainforest.
Held a decade after Salgados first showing at the National Museum, Genesis (2014), Amazônia continues conversations on the important topic of environmental conservation through this major new body of work, which is a culmination of his decades-long engagement with the Amazon region.
Chung May Khuen, Director of the National Museum of Singapore, said, The National Museum is proud to bring to Singapore the latest internationally acclaimed exhibition of works by Sebastião Salgado. The Amazon is deeply connected to the worlds climate and affects all of us, even in Singapore. Amid a heightened awareness and urgent call for greater climate action today, we hope that visitors will be inspired by Salgados remarkable photos and the exhibitions message to appreciate and take action to protect our natural world while respecting and learning from the Indigenous peoples who live in, and with, the rainforest.
A majestic journey through the lands of the Amazon
The exhibition spotlights critical aspects of the complex ecosystems of the Amazon, such as freshwater archipelagos and flying rivers, and presents more than 200 evocative black-and-white photographic prints in addition to slide projections, documenting its vibrant landscapes and the lives of the people who reside within it. Through this visual spectacle that encapsulates the regions majesty and fragility in equal measure, Salgado hopes that this serves as a poignant call for all to conserve the lungs of the world.
Salgado said, The Amazon rainforest is full of life, and is in itself an important lifeline for our world. The exhibition is a record of what remains of this vast and vulnerable heritage amid an uncertain future. It is our shared responsibility to conserve it and I hope that the exhibition will inspire the community to take action to prevent this exhibition from becoming a testimony of a lost world 50 years from now.
Tulsi Naidu, CEO Asia Pacific of Zurich Insurance Company Ltd the main global partner of Amazônia said, Zurichs longstanding global partnership with Sebastião Salgado reflects our commitment to climate action and a sustainable future. Through the Zurich Forest project, launched in 2020 in collaboration with the Salgados, weve helped restore parts of the Brazil Atlantic Forest by planting one million trees with Instituto Terra. We are now also supporting Instituto Terra in the acquisition of additional land for nature restoration and the construction of a new, larger nursery. In the Amazônia exhibition, Sebastião Salgados powerful photography beautifully curated by Lélia Wanick Salgado is a striking reminder of the urgent need to protect the natural world and its communities.
The exhibition is curated and designed by Salgados work and life partner, Lélia Wanick Salgado. It unfolds along two distinct but intertwined lines: the first showcasing breathtaking photography of the Amazons naturescapes, and the second of the Indigenous communities living in, and with, the rainforest.
Through the landscape photos, visitors are able to admire the natural wonders and phenomena unique to the Amazon rainforest:
● Aerial Views: The Amazon seen from Above features sweeping aerial panoramas of immense waterfalls and storm-laden skies.
● Flying Rivers: Watering the Continent captures the Amazons unique atmospheric phenomenon where water vapour from trees forms massive aerial rivers even bigger than the Amazon River.
● Tropical Storms: When It Rains in the Rainforest showcases dramatic images of brooding clouds hanging above the landscape.
● Mountains: Unexpected Uplands in the Lowlands portrays Brazils mist-draped peaks rising above the rainforest-covered lower slope.
● The Forest: A Source of Fear and Inspiration highlights the duality of the forest, once known as the Green Hell but is now seen as an extraordinary natural treasure to be protected.
● Anavilhanas: Islands in the Stream captures breathtaking images of the archipelago of 350 to 450 islands of every imaginable shape rising from the waters of the Rio Negro.
The second theme of the exhibition spotlights the diverse Indigenous communities in the Amazon. At the heart of the exhibition are three structures modelled after traditional Indigenous homes called ocas. Within this space, visitors can explore 100 striking photographs of the 12 Amazonian communities with whom Salgado engaged, complemented by video interviews with their leaders. The full exhibition highlights can be found in Annex A.
The experience is complemented by an immersive audio experience by French composer Jean-Michel Jarre. The soundscape envelopes visitors in a glorious sensorial experience of the Amazon through a symphony of natural sounds the rustling of trees, animal calls, bird songs and the gushing of waters from the mountain tops as well as voices and songs of the communities, drawn from the Museum of Ethnographys sound archives in Geneva. This journey continues in two projection rooms, where forest landscapes and portraits of Indigenous people are accompanied by soundscapes by Brazilian composers Heitor Villa- Lobos and Rodolfo Stroeter. A dedicated space in the exhibition features the work of Instituto Terra, the reforestation non-governmental organisation founded by the Salgados.
The exhibition also features Amazônia Touch, the first photographic volume specifically designed for blind and visually impaired audiences in partnership with Visio Foundation, an institution dedicated to promoting cultural inclusion of blind and visually impaired persons. Visitors can engage with tactile images rendered on brass plates and complemented by 21 panels made of acrylic resin and natural minerals.
Lélia Wanick Salgado, Curator and Exhibition Scenographer of Amazônia, said, Immersion is a big part of the curatorial process of this exhibition. By integrating visitors into the lush greenery of the rainforest and raw portrayals of the everyday lives of its Indigenous people, I hope to present a multidimensional look at the beauty of the Amazon, and impress on visitors the human and ecological elements at stake if we dont take action to protect it.
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