1000 years from now

  • Dates
    2016 - Ongoing
  • Author
  • Topics Portrait, Contemporary Issues, Documentary
  • Locations Brazil, Rio Grande do Sul

Brazil’s crisis culminated in 2016 with the highly televised and documented impeachment of president Dilma and now we are left to deal with the result of that event. This project is an investigation about what it feels to be in Brazil amidst one of the biggest crises in our history.

“I came here for a better job so I could make more money to help my family and eventually come back home”, he told me as we were having lunch near his workplace. “But the money is short, the Real is not as valuable as the Dollar. That wasn’t the case when I first came here”. Moussa is senegalese, he lives with five others in a three-bedroom apartment and works at an IT firm. His previous jobs in Brazil were pool-boy and selling trinkets on the street.

In another area of the city, a group gathers every Sunday to call for a military intervention in order to remove corrupt politicians, stabilize the country and hold new elections. “It’s not a dictatorship, it’s democracy. We just want to make our democracy better.” One of the members tells me that he was alive during the military dictatorship, he can attest the fact that it wasn’t that bad. “The history books are lying to you. I know it, I lived it.” Some of the members are former military, most are over 40.

This is the result of the previous years of unrest in Brazil. After international media payed its last amount of attention on us and decided that our story was one not worth reporting on anymore. We were left adrift with an uncertain future. The economic boom of the early 2000’s did not fulfill the dream of turning us into a developed nation. Instead, unsustainable policies and corruption made our economic crash inevitable. Brazil is a broken promise of a country and this has taken a toll on our spirit. We are a numb and fatigued people with no faith in our institutions to solve anything.

Protests, impeachment, new government, and all I can ask myself is "What is the point?". Because when all the rabble-rousing is done, after all rallying cries were shouted, the best we can hope for is that this period will end. We are living the in-between chapters of History, left to wonder: how will History describe these years? We won’t know for a long time, but, meanwhile, I might try to portray them and leave it to historians to define if I’m correct. I feel it’s the morning right after carnival: the beach is dirty, the skies are grey and the hangover is the only thing we'll remember.

© Gabriel Carpes - Image from the 1000 years from now photography project
i

Advertising for condos are glued on the fences surrounding the construction site. After construction is done these posters will be replaced for grey walls.

© Gabriel Carpes - Image from the 1000 years from now photography project
i

Between 2013 and 2016, Brazil saw some of the biggest street protests in our history. Manifestations ranged from protests against unfair bus fares to vague "anti-corruption" marches. The protests quickly grew in size and by 2016 most of them were simply either for or against the impeachment of president Dilma.

© Gabriel Carpes - Image from the 1000 years from now photography project
i

Moussa, senegalese immigrant. Came to Brazil hoping for a better job so he could send more money home to his parents, but the current crisis makes him think that it might have been a mistake. “The money is short, the Real is not as valuable as the Dollar. That wasn’t the case when I first came here”.

© Gabriel Carpes - Image from the 1000 years from now photography project
i

Planned neighborhoods of residential condos build near a big shopping mall. These buildings sit in the middle of big plots of land where three or more are grouped together behind security walls.

© Gabriel Carpes - Image from the 1000 years from now photography project
i

Security guards at private condos have the job of allowing certain people into the buildings and preventing others from entering.

© Gabriel Carpes - Henrique, Brazilian artist with tattoos on his right arm depicting Tim Maia, Malcom-X and Haile Selassie
i

Henrique, Brazilian artist with tattoos on his right arm depicting Tim Maia, Malcom-X and Haile Selassie

© Gabriel Carpes - Image from the 1000 years from now photography project
i

Camera at the Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul in the arts institute. A grid was installed in front of the camera to prevent any artistic intervention by the students on it.

© Gabriel Carpes - Waiting room chairs in the department of urbanism of Porto Alegre city hall.
i

Waiting room chairs in the department of urbanism of Porto Alegre city hall.

© Gabriel Carpes - Image from the 1000 years from now photography project
i

Luciana Gomes, Brazilian dancer and designer. Dreams of moving to the US hoping for a better future and a society where she can be a professional dancer and earn a living. “Seems like everyone here is trying to put the other person down. You don’t root for each other here in Brazil, seems like people are always hoping you’ll fail”.

© Gabriel Carpes - Image from the 1000 years from now photography project
i

Archives of the department of urbanism at Porto Alegre city hall. A small room right next to the air conditioner unit that has malfunctioned and cause a flood in the archives more than once.

© Gabriel Carpes - Image from the 1000 years from now photography project
i

Unprocessed files sit in an empty desk of Porto Alegre city hall. Large amounts of paperwork make bureaucracy in Brazil very slow and cumbersome.

© Gabriel Carpes - Image from the 1000 years from now photography project
i

Near the military high school in Porto Alegre is this monument in honor to the Brazilian soldiers who fought in World War II. The south of Brazil has the largest number of military men and women in the country.

© Gabriel Carpes - Sérgio, former Workers Party supporter at a local Gun Range
i

Sérgio, former Workers Party supporter at a local Gun Range

© Gabriel Carpes - Image from the 1000 years from now photography project
i

As a form of protest against government cuts in education some undergrad students occupied and slept inside university buildings. Protests were usually arranged by major and some were more organized than others. Most protesters dispersed once summer started.

© Gabriel Carpes - Image from the 1000 years from now photography project
i

A worker with CUT (Central Única dos Trabalhadores) garment rests on the grass during manifestations supporting former president Lula ahead of his second trial for corruption. Thousands of workers from around the country gathered in Porto Alegre to show support for the former president. They camped at a park near the courts and organized speeches and marches in support of the president.

© Gabriel Carpes - Factory Union flag hanged beside the Brazilian flag at Lula Camp
i

Factory Union flag hanged beside the Brazilian flag at Lula Camp

© Gabriel Carpes - Image from the 1000 years from now photography project
i

Windows of a recently renewed apartment were covered as to not damage them during renovations. This apartment will be a rental.

© Gabriel Carpes - Image from the 1000 years from now photography project
i

Evangelicals are the fastest growing religion in Brazil and young people are drawn to it at growing numbers as the church offers activities such as singing groups, dancing and parties.

© Gabriel Carpes - Image from the 1000 years from now photography project
i

Several real state developments had to be stopped during the crisis due to lack of funding. This hotel by the side of the road was sealed of with bricks to prevent it from being occupied by the homeless.

© Gabriel Carpes - An empty chair where a doorman sits at an apartment building.
i

An empty chair where a doorman sits at an apartment building.

© Gabriel Carpes - Unfinished remodeling of government offices in Porto Alegre
i

Unfinished remodeling of government offices in Porto Alegre

© Gabriel Carpes - Image from the 1000 years from now photography project
i

Portrait of Martin Luther King Jr placed over the portrait of a white Brazilian historical figure as a protest against the erasure of black Brazilians contributions to our history.

© Gabriel Carpes - Portraits of Margaret Thatcher and Ludwig Von Mises that were used in anti-government protests from 2016 to 2018
i

Portraits of Margaret Thatcher and Ludwig Von Mises that were used in anti-government protests from 2016 to 2018

© Gabriel Carpes - Image from the 1000 years from now photography project
i

Natural gas pipes cutting through the recovering natural vegetation in the Santos bay region, taking gas up to the city of São Paulo

Latest Projects

  • I saw a tree bearing stones in the place of apples and pears

  • try, take time

  • BUY NOTHING

  • Unimportant Message

  • The Darker the Night, the Brighter the Stars

  • Like the Waves Appear and Disappear and Appear Again

Sign up to our weekly newsletter

Stay in the loop


We will send you weekly news on contemporary photography. You can change your mind at any time. We will treat your data with respect. For more information please visit our privacy policy. By ticking here, you agree that we may process your information in accordance with them. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.