Public Project
INVISIBLE LANDSCAPE
Summary
After a Revolution, a Chilean Photographer Mourns the Martyrs
In a new series about Chile’s political uprising, Javier Álvarez crafts a striking account of family grief and revolutionary joy.
Álvarez, born and raised in Chile, and currently based in New York, took a photograph of the couple at their dinner table last fall, after reaching out to the families of men and women killed during the historic nationwide protests that started in October 2019 and continued for months. (According to Chile’s National Institute for Human Rights, law-enforcement officers injured more than four hundred protesters—leaving many partly or completely blind—and more than thirty people died during the unrest.)
Álvarez’s research turned into a striking new series, Paisaje Invisible (Invisible Landscape) (2020)—a close-up of the empty corner where a man was shot months before, or the ashes of the supermarket where Paula Lorca’s body was burned. “I wanted to focus on the invisible,” Álvarez says. “On what is left that nobody thinks about.”
Text by Camila Osorio.
After a Revolution, a Chilean Photographer Mourns the Martyrs
In a new series about Chile's political uprising, Javier Álvarez crafts a striking account of family grief and revolutionary joy.
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