Distant Early Warning
The project Distant Early Warning is a visual record of the escalating state of the militarization and industrialization of the Arctic. The region has passed a perilous tipping point as nations with territory in the Arctic Circle and others with economic interests in resource extraction and shipping routes have begun staking claims to this final frontier. In the 1950’s, fearing a Soviet nuclear attack over the Arctic, the United States and Canada constructed the Distant Early Warning Line, a radar system extending from Alaska to Greenland. For nearly 70 years, this forgotten Arctic frontline has been waiting for an attack. Though this radar system can detect a nuclear strike, it cannot defend against climate change. These changes in the Arctic have been influenced by many pressures, mostly from climate change, land claims, and the fracturing of the geopolitical order in the High North due to the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
Louie Palu
Louie Palu is a Canadian/American photographer and filmmaker whose work has examined social political issues, such as human rights and conflict for 30-years. He has been awarded a John Simon Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship and World Press Photo Award. His work has examined the changing geopolitics in the Arctic for 30-years and the wars in Afghanistan and Ukraine. His work has been published widely, and his films have been screened worldwide.
Exhibition presented free of charge in the 1912 Building of La Pulperie.
Exhibition presented within the framework of the Zoom Photo Festival Saguenay.
For more information on the Zoom Photo Festival Saguenay, consult the zoomphotofestival.ca