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Description
228 pages : illustrations (some color). First discovered in the touristic Gallipoli region in 2013, the bacteria Xylella Fastidiosa has rapidly been killing olive trees in Salento over the past several years. The disease is spread by sap sucking insects and stops the flow of water and nutrients through the xylem vessels, causing trees to die from the inside out. In an effort to contain further outbreaks, EU authorities dictate that all trees within 100 metres of one affected must be destroyed, whether it is infected or not. The result is economic catastrophe in a region where olive oil production is the main source of income, which has now been cut in half, and farmers across Europe now fear an uncontrolled spread of the pathogen. Thousands of farmers in Salento have lost their life's work, and the devastating repercussions push beyond the environmental landscape to the daily lives of the population, causing the loss of their unique human and cultural heritage. While no direct remedy to stop the pest and save the trees has yet been found, agronomists and scientists are researching solutions. In particular, experiments are underway using shoots of wild olive trees found still alive and germinating within Xylella-devastated areas, grafting them onto more productive tree variants in an effort to create a resistant 'super-tree' species. Caimi + Piccinni have taken a passionate but careful approach to documenting this subject, exposing the farmers' very personal stories with utmost concern for the tragic circumstances they are suffering. By interviewing the farmers, they give a public voice to their opinions and experience. An unfiltered, personal and intense account of Xylella, the plant epidemic that threatens Europe; "Fastidiosa" is the result of Caimi + Piccinni photographing the plight of local farmers and environmental devastation in Puglia, southern Italy, over a period of six years. Working under the project title "This Land is My Land", the duo were in the groves with farmers facing the destruction of their history, culture and livelihood, as they were forced to cut down heritage olive trees to prevent the spread of infection into northern Europe. Millions of trees have already been felled, and there is no known cure for the disease. "Fastidiosa" features a dramatic mix of black and white analogue portraits and landscapes, colour images highlighting scientific research and experimental efforts, with archival photographs and words from residents of the region. -- publisher's statement. Jean-Marc Caimi and Valentina Piccinni are a photographic duo focusing on contemporary stories. Their work is regularly featured in the world press, The Guardian, Die Zeit, LEspresso, Le Monde and many others. Their personal involvement and unfiltered approach to documentary photography has resulted in their work being recognized internationally. Mixed art papers, double fold-out, Swiss binding, silver-printed dust jacket. 500 copies. Design by Tiffany Jones.
Publication Date
2022
Imprint / Year
London : Overlapse Press, 2022.
Publisher
Overlapse Press
City
London
Keywords
art paper; foldouts; Swiss binding; silver-printed dust jacket; documentary photography; environmental art; environmental impact; Bacteria (domain); pathogens; Olea europaea; olive oil; farming; Xyella Fastidious; Salento, Salerno, Campania, Italy; Gallipoli; Apulia, Italy; cropland; ruined
Disciplines
Photography
RISD Fleet Library Catalog Record
Recommended Citation
Caimi, Jean-Mar; Piccinni, Valentina; and Jones, Tiffany, "Fastidiosa" (2022). Photography. 17.
https://digitalcommons.risd.edu/specialcollections_books_photography/17