Photographers Ana Zibelnik and Jakob Ganslmeier have prepared a selection of three motifs, which are available in this special edition in sizes 30 x 40 cm and 60 x 80 cm. By purchasing the prints, you enable the artists to continue documenting the magnitude of the climate crisis.
“I understood that this was going to be the paramount challenge of our time, the one that binds all others. I wanted to take action — I wanted to shape the future — because the future will be defined by the climate crisis.” — Giacomo Zattini, Fridays for Future Italia
Size and edition:
1. small print – 30 x 40 cm (paper size 35 x 45 cm), edition of 25. Immediately available.
2. collectors' print – 60 x 80 cm (paper size 86 x 88 cm), edition of 5 + 2 AP. Available on-demand.
Includes a certificate of authenticity signed by the artists. Framing is not included.
The prints of this special edition are available at Galerija Fotografija and in our online shop.
More about the Fault Line project
Fault Line portrays the impact of the climate crisis in Europe by examining a myriad of responses within society. From migration driven by environmental factors, eco-anxiety, and activism on one hand, to the troubling surge of populist rhetoric, it questions how the accelerating rhythm of disasters leads to a deepening of polarization and erodes our collective resilience.
Where have the artists been so far?
In May, they travelled all over Italy, collaborating with young climate activists on climate anxiety and engaging with those affected by the devastating floods in Emilia Romagna. In July, they called out Italian policymakers and climate-change deniers, delving into the polarising effects of climate issues, and met with the young acitivists from Fridays for Future Italia. They interviewed lawyers dedicated to the legal recognition of climate migrants and met David Yambio, human rights activist and founder of Refugees in Libya. In September, they documented the aftermath of Europe's largest-ever wildfire, in the Greek area of Alexandroupoli near the Turkish border. In October, they explored Lampedusa, the Italian island often portrayed as the European border in a permanent state of crisis, continuing their research on climate migration.