VIA LACTEA

  • Dates
    2015 - Ongoing
  • Author
  • Topics Portrait, Landscape, Documentary

Milk farmers and producers of this images follow a story that began with a genetic mutation in their ancestors, shortly after the first agricultural settlements. A change that allowed them to tolerate lactose even at an adult age, thus facilitating their survival in these harsh mountainous lands, often cold and covered in snow.

Although the consumption of milk is not a matter of survival anymore, breeders and producers, convinced of the goodness of their product and worried about the decrease in consumption and incomes, make sure that their own people (among the most lactose tolerant in the world) aren’t going to lose this characteristic based on an enzyme that stays active only if continuously stimulated.

In a context of modern agriculture, I wanted to interpret the character of something apparently ordinary but strongly related with the identity and continuous transformation of this lands and the habits of their inhabitants. In the long winter months I travelled across my country, to observe the people who earn their living from milk production, trying to find in them the reflections of that mysterious enzyme they preserve, as a characteristic of their nature.

© Alfio Tommasini - Image from the VIA LACTEA photography project
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When the night is still deep, the farmers are awake, working under the fluorescent lights of their sheds. Rows of cows full of milk are attached to milking machines or are walking towards fast extraction robots.

© Alfio Tommasini - Image from the VIA LACTEA photography project
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Large companies collect the product, which will be analysed, transformed and distributed. Shortly after, most people are going to have their breakfast, sitting in a warm room at a table lavishly decked with dairy products.

© Alfio Tommasini - Image from the VIA LACTEA photography project
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The cow is a symbol of these lands, and owning the one with the most beautiful and capacious udder is a source of pride. That’s why in their leisure time many cattle raisers go to fairs to show off their pearl, cleaned of excrement and polished with shiny lacquer.