Public Project
Last Wildest Place (VISURA)
Covering over a billion acres, it is bigger than the next two largest tropical rainforests combined and alone accounts for half the world’s remaining rainforest, as much as 30% of all terrestrial species, 20% of the world's fresh water, and 20% of our global oxygen. It provides climate stability for the entire planet—and the carbon sequestered in its forests and released by their deforestation matters to us all.
The Purús/Manu region in southeastern Peru is one of the most remote, inaccessible, and important areas of the Amazon, where still-intact natural ecosystems provide sustenance for settled indigenous communities and home to perhaps the highest concentration of isolated “uncontacted” tribes on Earth. While still largely undeveloped, this last wildest place is increasingly threatened by the usual deforestation drivers including logging, mining, oil and gas development, cattle grazing, coca cultivation, agricultural expansion, and both legal and illegal road construction projects that open up previously inaccessible forests to all these pressures with devastating and irrevocable impacts on the ecosystems and all who depend on this last wildest place.
I first experienced the Purús/Manu region in 2015, and have since returned a dozen times spending close to a year total photographing its various and complicated issues. It is important to point out that we recognize the tragic histories of colonialism across the entire Amazon and so issues such as appropriate authorship, just representation, and agency vs. appropriation drive our collaborations with the communities we’ve worked with for years. The last trip at the end of 2019 was to some of the most remote western headwaters documenting illegal narco land-grabs and the fight for indigenous sovereignty. While this is an ongoing project, access has been severely—and appropriately—restricted by the pandemic including multiple canceled trips in 2020 and 2021. We are planning several visits in 2022, pandemic pending.
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