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Brocken spectre architecture
Brocken spectre architecture









It was entirely homemade and processed by hand in my studio you can see the fingerprints of the climate emergency pressed into the film’s heat sensitive emulsion. Satellite cameras reveal dieback with unsettling clarity. A custom-made multispectral video camera mounted to a helicopter captures the systematic clearing of land for agriculture. RM: I’ve used a range of media, so it shifts gears in quite violent ways. Why is this approach effective in presenting the effect of deforestation? This has since evolved into the more ambitious, immersive film, Broken Spectre.Ī: Your new moving image work, Broken Spectre, presents desolate landscapes in vivid colour, offering a renewed depiction of the Amazon with scientific imagery technologies.

brocken spectre architecture

Although this change in subject might seem like a clean break, all of my work is united in an examination of the lived environment. Eccentric nocturnal portraits of plants and insects demonstrate the connections between lifeforms in the rainforest – a topography that is simultaneously over and under-represented. Ultra was my first attempt to describe the non-human. RM: I have spent the past ten years working with scientific imaging technologies to defamiliarise subjects and mediate complex human narratives. It pairs stark footage with accounts from Indigenous communities – imploring global viewers to see the impending fate of the biome, whilst highlighting the impact of inaction in the face of crisis.Ī: ​​​​You began documenting human rights atrocities associated with the land with Infra (2010-2015), before turning your lens to the ecological crisis with Ultra (2019-2020). In the film, now on view at the National Gallery of Victoria, the artist, along with Australian composer Ben Frost and American cinematographer Trevor Tweeten, asks us to look anew at the environmental and social disaster.

brocken spectre architecture

1980) urgent new film, Broken Spectre, which depicts the destruction and devastation of the Amazon – an area which spans 6.7 million km2 and is often referred to as the “lungs of the earth.” The 20-metre panorama makes its world premiere at a poignant moment: the rainforest is rapidly approaching a point of no return. The etymology denotes definitions from “colours, an extreme between two points” to “a ghostly, yet ever-present vision.” Now, the word appears in the title of Richard Mosse’s (b. Mosse shows both human sides of the tragedy: from the Yanomami and Munduruku Indigenous communities fighting for survival to illegal gold miners poisoning and destroying entire river systems for tiny handfuls of gold alongside Brazilian cowboys wilfully burning their pristine surroundings to create pasture for cattle to sell on international meat and leather markets.Ĭreated from 2018 to 2022, Broken Spectre is published ahead of gravely significant general elections in Brazil, in which Jair Bolsanaro’s victory may seal the destruction of the irreplaceable Amazon forever.Spectre comes from the early 17th century Latin word for spectrum, which further traces to specere, or, to look. As climate change continues to define our era and the future of the planet, Mosse bears witness to a rapidly unfolding catastrophe: recent scientific studies predict that the Amazon is close to reaching a tipping point, at which stage it will no longer be able to generate rain, triggering mass forest dieback and carbon release at devastating levels, impacting climate change, biodiversity, and local and international communities.











Brocken spectre architecture