Isabella La Rocca González

Photographer
   
CENSORED LANDSCAPES
Location: 40422
Nationality: USA/EU dual
Biography: I am an artist, educator, and activist working primarily with photography and motion pictures. My work is part of a long tradition in photography: to bring to light and find beauty in the disregarded, hidden, unconscious, or commonplace. I... MORE
Public Story
CENSORED LANDSCAPES
Copyright Isabella La Rocca 2024
Date of Work Feb 2013 - Ongoing
Updated Jan 2019
Topics Abuse, Agriculture, Animal Liberation, Animal Rights, Animals, Climate Change, Documentary, Editorial, Food, Human Rights, Immigration, Landscape, Obesity, Photography, Spirituality, Vegan, Womens Rights, Workers Rights
In February of 2012 in Turlock, CA, 50,000 hens were abandoned in a battery cage facility left to starve in cramped rusted cages. I first photographed the abandoned facility a year later (please see A&L Poultry Abandoned Battery Cage Facility, 2013). This inspired my current photographic series, CENSORED LANDSCAPES, consisting of photographic landscapes that include sites of animal agriculture, including livestock auctions, slaughterhouses, egg farms, “broiler” chicken farms, turkey farms, rabbit farms, goat farms, squab farms, duck farms, dairy farms, feedlots, and fish farms.

From Carleton Watkins to Ansel Adams to Robert Adams, American landscape photography has evolved in conjunction with the conservationist and environmental movement. In the late 20th century, landscape photographers, particularly those associated with the New Topographics exhibition, explored the human presence in the landscape. But farmed animals have almost entirely been omitted from the genre, despite their prodigious numbers (in the U.S. over 10 billion land animals and billions of marine animals are slaughtered every year for food). Their exclusion from landscape photography reflects their exclusion from environmental activism even though animal agriculture is a leading cause, if not the leading cause, of climate change, deforestation, ocean acidification, habitat destruction, loss of biodiversity, and mass species extinction.

The industry has a vested interest in suppressing any understanding of the environmental destruction, cruelty, health effects, and worker exploitation of animal agriculture and has attempted to pass “ag-gag” laws that criminalize photographing sites of animal agriculture in more than half of U.S. state legislatures.  Despite the unconstitutionality of such laws, they have passed in seven states.

The animals that have been made invisible in the landscape are represented by numbers in bold black.
LinkedIn Icon Facebook Icon Twitter Icon
1,716

Also by Isabella La Rocca González —

Story

Justice for George Floyd Protest in Central Kentucky

Isabella La Rocca González / Danville, KY
Story

FAST FOOD

Isabella La Rocca
CENSORED LANDSCAPES by Isabella La Rocca
Sign-up for
For more access