More than exhibition spaces: opportunities to foster dialogue, reflection, and encounter. At Lawen, we conceive each exhibition as a living space where images return to the territories, memories are reactivated, and new conversations are built among diverse audiences.
To exhibit means to share processes, open up questions, and create bonds between art, journalism, and community. Each installation seeks to dismantle the distance between those who look and those who are looked at, fostering a deeper understanding of the conflicts and forms of resistance we document. In this way, the exhibition becomes a political and collective act of listening and reciprocity.
The exhibition on fracking in Vaca Muerta exposes the human and environmental impacts of extractivism, as well as the forms of resistance defending life in the face of the oil industry model.
A portrait of the spiritual and territorial resistance of the Mapuche people against extractivism in Chile and Argentina.
A photographic essay by Pablo Piovano that reveals the consequences of the agro-industrial model on the bodies and territories of fumigated communities.