Tantas coisas perdidas
Tantas coisas perdidas
Born in Sao Paulo Brazil, in 1967, Caio Reisewitz is a photographer who portrays the
attendance of the sublime in nature, in its most classical denotation. In
Reisewitz's grandiose photos, the indisputable protagonists are mighty thickets and
plains, rivers and meadows, in which the human being seems to have hardly
interfered. Nowadays, these nearly Utopian, pristine natural scenes are hard to spot
in their attempt to defend themselves from human actions.
His landscapes seem secret places, coming right out of the heart of the jungle.
However, they were captured in the vicinity of his hometown, Sao Paulo, an
impressive megalopolis that grows mercilessly, greedily devouring its surroundings.
On the margins of this conurbation, nature has remained untouched, but not for long.
In exhibitions of Reisewitz's photographs, a picture of a misty landscape captured
at the break of dawn is featured next to an image of a garbage dump on fire. This is
the photographer's immediate reality.
Another theme is land reform, the photographic elegy of places that humans have
devastated just like they have done since they learned agriculture and burnt
greenery before cultivating, razing the land in the most primitive ways so they
could establish cattle ranches. The burning of forest grounds is a preliminary
system to prepare land for mass cultivation, whether it be transgenic soybean
plantations in the Amazon, or sugarcane plantations destined for the production of
fuel ethanol in different parts of the country. The main importers of both products
- soybean and sugarcane - are the United States and China. Since 1999, exports to
these countries have increased by nearly 600%. Reisewitz's depictions of these
plantations emanate an overwhelming beauty despite the images of degradation
resulting from human need. The expanse of Brazilian landscape, the invisible human
presence that we perceive in the razed fields and the precarious huts of the
landless squatters who occupy non-productive landed properties help us understand a
life of hardship, and a struggle that is seemingly impossible to win, but that in
the course of centuries has been questioned: the struggle of humans in face of
nature.
The violence against the earth not only threatens its existence but also generates
transformations of a political and social order. The theme of land reform refers to
the geophysical and historical use of the earth. The human individual has redesigned
landscape with his investigation - something that is not always an impure,
malignant, and disparaging thing, though more often than not it is.
In nature, the conception of a landscape is the point of confluence of certain
events of a given time of day, such as light and other elements that determine a
magical instant. Reisewitz, trained in the German school, is referred to as someone
who presents his work in nonpartisan manner so that it is up to the spectator's eye
to discover and scrutinize what he/she sees. The result is an accurate technique and
absolute temperance, a total monumentality. He patiently waits for the opportunity
to capture this moment, a sensorial realm that contains elements that photography
cannot convey - namely sounds, odors, atmosphere... - yet he hopes that viewers will
hear and smell the sounds and odors he perceived in the given landscape, in that
moment. Reisewitz portrays the world so he can become impregnated with it.
Opening: Thursday January 25, 2007, 6-9 pm
Galerie van der Mieden
Pourbusstraat 15 - Antwerp
Wed-Sat 14-18 and by appointment